The role of juvenile hormone in regulating reproductive physiology and dominance in Dinoponera quadriceps ants

PeerJ. 2019 Mar 1:7:e6512. doi: 10.7717/peerj.6512. eCollection 2019.

Abstract

Unequal reproductive output among members of the same sex (reproductive skew) is a common phenomenon in a wide range of communally breeding animals. In such species, reproductive dominance is often acquired during antagonistic interactions between group members that establish a reproductive hierarchy in which only a few individuals reproduce. Rank-specific syndromes of behavioural and physiological traits characterize such hierarchies, but how antagonistic behavioural interactions translate into stable rank-specific syndromes remains poorly understood. The pleiotropic nature of hormones makes them prime candidates for generating such syndromes as they physiologically integrate environmental (social) information, and often affect reproduction and behaviour simultaneously. Juvenile hormone (JH) is one of several hormones that occupy such a central regulatory role in insects and has been suggested to regulate reproductive hierarchies in a wide range of social insects including ants. Here we use experimental manipulation to investigate the effect of JH levels on reproductive physiology and social dominance in high-ranked workers of the eusocial ant Dinoponera quadriceps, a species that has secondarily reverted to queenless, simple societies. We show that JH regulated reproductive physiology, with ants in which JH levels were experimentally elevated having more regressed ovaries. In contrast, we found no evidence of JH levels affecting dominance in social interactions. This could indicate that JH and ovary development are decoupled from dominance in this species, however only high-ranked workers were investigated. The results therefore confirm that the regulatory role of JH in reproductive physiology in this ant species is in keeping with its highly eusocial ancestors rather than its secondary reversion to simple societies, but more investigation is needed to disentangle the relationships between hormones, behaviour and hierarchies.

Keywords: Eusociality; Reproductive skew; Social dominance; Social hierarchy; Social insect.

Grants and funding

The work was funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG) and an EC FP7 Marie Curie Fellowship PIEF-GA-2013-626585 (Tobias Pamminger), and the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council BB/J011339/1 (Victoria Norman). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.