Pech-May, FG; Medina LM; May-Itzá W. de J., Paxton, RJ; Quezada-Euán JJG. 2012. Colony pollen reserves affect body size, sperm production and sexual development in males of the stingless bee Melipona beecheii. Insectes Sociaux, 59:417-424.
Abstract
The production of male sexual
offspring by social insect colonies is often strongly seasonal or
resource-dependent. In stingless bees, males are produced in smaller
numbers under conditions of low colony food reserves; whether such males
are negatively affected in traits related to reproductive success is
not known. We compared body size, sperm production and sexual maturity
in Melipona beecheii males reared with
experimentally supplemented or reduced pollen reserves, but with
otherwise equal numbers of workers and equal quantities of honey
reserves. We also studied the same traits in males collected from
non-manipulated colonies with pollen reserves intermediate between the
supplemented or reduced groups but with more workers and honey reserves.
Males reared under experimentally reduced pollen reserves had
significantly smaller bodies and lower sperm counts compared to those
reared in colonies with experimentally supplemented pollen reserves.
There was also a significantly positive relationship between the number
of sperm and body size in males across all colony treatments. The
maximum number of sperm in seminal vesicles was recorded 2 days later in
males from colonies with reduced pollen compared to males from colonies
with supplementary pollen. Males from non-manipulated colonies were
intermediate in size, sperm count and speed of maturation. Our study
documents for the first time the existence of large size variation in
males of stingless bees that is related with the amount of pollen
reserves in their natal colony. We conclude that a colony’s pollen
reserves have a major impact on male body size, sperm production and
speed of sexual maturity in this stingless bee, which may be the case in
other social insects. Stingless bees are a good model system to study
the balance between colony-level selection and individual-level
selection on male sexually selected traits such as body size.
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