Abstract
Intracolony aggression within and between castes of social insects is common1,3. We have observed an unusual aggressive interaction between nestmates of the paper wasp Polistes dominulus. In response to foragers returning to the colony, females (workers) initiate aggressive encounters with males culminating with the male being forced head-first into an empty nest-cell (‘male-stuffing’). ‘Stuffed’ males are unable to feed, so the behaviour seems to ensure that food is preferentially channelled to larvae, which are likely to be more closely related to the workers than are the adult males.
Main
We observed two categories of stuffing. ‘Initial stuffing’ (Fig. 1) began with antenna-to-antenna contact and was followed by grappling, biting, and sting-threats. The aggressor then forced the recipient head-first into an empty cell. ‘Repeated stuffing’ was characterized by biting and pushing the abdomen of an individual whose head and thorax were already inside a cell.
We studied the behaviour by transcribing and analysing 26 hours of videotape. We saw stuffing behaviour only in colonies containing males (n =5 colonies) and not in those without (n =6 colonies; sexed by antennal morphology2;χ 2=21, P <0.001). stuffing was directed exclusively at males, despite their being greatly outnumbered by females (1:4.21) in colonies of both sexes (binomial test, P <0.0001). of 66 stuffing events, 46 were directed at males from that colony (identified by marking them at eclosion); the remainder were of unknown origin. Queens (n =5) did not stuff males (0/66 events; binomial test, P <0.1). all stuffing was done by workers other than the returning forager.
Initial stuffing occurred soon after the return of a forager, whereas repeated stuffing occurred at random times (Fig. 2). Males that had been repeatedly stuffed remained in cells 6.35 times longer (t̃=384.29 ± 43.01 s; mean time ± s.e.m.) than the mean time between forager arrivals (t̃=60.53 ± 2.25 s; n =833). Thus, stuffing may function to preclude males from gaining access to resources gathered by the workers.
Limiting food consumption by males may maximize the inclusive fitness of workers, who should direct their help towards closely related kin4,5. Feeding future reproductive females provides a larger fitness pay-off than feeding adult males6. Workers from a colony containing one singly mated queen have a relatedness to sisters of 0.75. Workers are only related by 0.25 to brothers, 0.375 to nephews (worker-produced males) and are unrelated to immigrant males.
Assuming that female larvae are present, workers are more closely related to reproductive-destined larvae than to adult males. Even in circumstances where workers are, on average, equally related to male and female nestmates (such as brothers and half-sisters when the queen has mated more than once), feeding needy larvae may provide a larger inclusive fitness pay-off than feeding adult males, which can forage for themselves. Preferential channelling of resources to larvae, by stuffing males, may maximize the genetic self-interest of worker wasps.
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Starks, P., Poe, E. ‘Male-stuffing’ in wasp societies. Nature 389, 450 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1038/38931
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/38931
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