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Male survivorship and the evolution of eusociality in partially bivoltine sweat bees

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posted on 2025-08-01, 15:38 authored by J Gruber, J Field
Eusociality, where workers typically forfeit their own reproduction to assist their mothers in raising siblings, is a fundamental paradox in evolutionary biology. By sacrificing personal reproduction, helpers pay a significant cost, which must be outweighed by indirect fitness benefits of helping to raise siblings. In 1983, Jon Seger developed a model showing how in the haplodiploid Hymenoptera (ants, wasps and bees), a partially bivoltine life cycle with alternating sex ratios may have promoted the evolution of eusociality. Seger predicted that eusociality would be more likely to evolve in hymenopterans where a foundress produces a male-biased first brood sex ratio and a female-biased second brood. This allows first brood females to capitalize on super-sister relatedness through helping to produce the female-biased second brood. In Seger’s model, the key factor driving alternating sex ratios was that first brood males survive to mate with females of both the second and the first brood, reducing the reproductive value of second brood males. Despite being potentially critical in the evolution of eusociality, however, male survivorship has received little empirical attention. Here, we tested whether first brood males survive across broods in the facultatively eusocial sweat bee Halictus rubicundus. We obtained high estimates of survival and, while recapture rates were low, at least 10% of first brood males survived until the second brood. We provide empirical evidence supporting Seger’s model. Further work, measuring brood sex ratios and comparing abilities of first and second brood males to compete for fertilizations, is required to fully parameterize the model.

Funding

695744

European Union Horizon 2020

History

Rights

© 2022 Gruber, Field. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

Notes

This is the final version. Available on open access from Public Library of Science via the DOI in this record Data Availability: All data files are available from the Open Access Framework database https://osf.io/k9tvf/?view_only=730772d6e60c4bb0a01cf7ec3f42b9fa.

Journal

PLoS ONE

Pagination

e0276428-e0276428

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Version

  • Version of Record

Language

en

FCD date

2022-10-24T10:23:47Z

FOA date

2022-10-24T10:25:33Z

Citation

Vol. 17(10), article e0276428

Department

  • Ecology and Conservation

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