Journal
AMERICAN NATURALIST
Volume 184, Issue 1, Pages 110-118Publisher
UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/676525
Keywords
policing; cost benefit; recognition errors; egg; Apis mellifera; honeybee
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Funding
- Osterreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften
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Worker honeybees, Apis mellifera, police each other's reproduction by killing worker-laid eggs. Previous experiments demonstrated that worker policing is effective, killing most (similar to 98%) worker-laid eggs. However, many queen-laid eggs were also killed (similar to 50%) suggesting that effective policing may have high costs. In these previous experiments, eggs were transferred using forceps into test cells, mostly into unrelated discriminator colonies. We measured both the survival of unmanipulated queen-laid eggs and the proportion of removal errors that were rectified by the queen laying a new egg. Across 2 days of the 3-day egg stage, only 9.6% of the queen-laid eggs in drone cells and 4.1% in worker cells were removed in error. When queen-laid eggs were removed from cells, 85% from drone cells and 61% from worker cells were replaced within 3 days. Worker policing in the honeybee has a high benefit to policing workers because workers are more related to the queen's sons (brothers, r = 0.25) than sister workers' sons (0.15). This study shows that worker policing also has a low cost in terms of the killing of queen-laid eggs, as only a small proportion of queen-laid eggs are killed, most of which are rapidly replaced.
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