Siblings
Are The Best Carriers Of Genes
A recent science article reported some interesting
findings to a study of bees.Dr Bill Hughes from the School of
Biological Sciences University Sydney and now at the University
of Leeds, together with colleagues from the University of Sydney
and the University of Sussex published their findings in the 30
May issue of Science.
Researchers have shed light on a paradox of the evolutionary
process that has existed since Darwin's time, why individual
bees will rear their siblings rather then reproduce themselves?
Eusocial behaviour - representing one of the pinnacles of
sociality - is characterised by individuals who will
altruistically rear siblings and forsake giving birth to their
own offspring. The existence of such altruistic behaviour was
described by Charles Darwin as such a fundamental paradox that
it potentially threatened his whole theory of natural selection.
How, Darwin pondered, can a trait that causes sterility spread
in a population?
Now, researchers have provided the first evidence that monogamy
in ancestral eusocial insects - which produced highly related
individuals - was key to the evolution of eusociality in
insects.
In 1964 biologist Bill Hamilton, suggested that an individual
can be more successful at passing on its genes by helping
relatives to rear their young rather than reproducing personally
- a process commonly called kin selection.
However, this theory has recently been challenged by E.O. Wilson
- founder of socio-biology - who argued that relatedness is
unimportant and that highly social behaviour evolves simply
because individuals do better when they cooperate than when they
live a solitary life.
Until now there has not been data available to allow us to
distinguish which of the Hamilton or Wilson hypotheses is
correct.
The study provides an explicit test of the two theories by
examining female mating frequency across eusocial Hymenoptera
(bees, wasps and ants).
Team member Professor Ben Oldroyd from the University of Sydney
said "Sociality has evolved repeatedly in the Hymenoptera and
the Thysanoptera (thrips). These orders of insects have an
unusual mechanism of sex determination in which males are
haploid (one set of chromosomes) and females are diploid (two
sets of chromosomes like humans). This haplo-diploidy generates
very high relatedness among sisters."
Monogamy (mating with one male) means that female offspring of a
haplodiploidy insect are highly related, so if the ancestral
social insects were monogamous then that would suggest
Hamilton's kin selection theory was correct, whereas if the
ancestral social insects mated with multiple males, as do most
other animals, then that would indicate Wilson is right.
The researchers combined the mating frequencies of 267 species
of living social hymenoptera with an advanced statistical
technique that reconstructs ancestral states, to infer just how
many males the ancestral social insect females mated with.
In every group that they looked at, the researchers found that
the ancestral females were always monogamous. This is a
surprising result, given the extreme polyandry (females mating
with many males) of many living social insects.
"Multiple mating by females is common, in fact usual, across the
animal world. Thus it is quite startling that our analysis shows
that monogamy was the ancestral condition for all of the modern
social insects," said Prof Oldroyd.
Ancestral monogamy demonstrates conclusively that high
relatedness was key to the evolution of social insects - just as
Darwin himself suggested at the dawn of evolutionary theory.

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