Egg size and number is influenced by both environmental and social factors in a facultatively social bee
Pelin Kayaalp A B and Michael P. Schwarz AA Biological Sciences, Flinders University, GPO Box 2100, Adelaide, SA 5001, Australia.
B Corresponding author. Email: pelin.kayaalp@flinders.edu.au
Australian Journal of Zoology 55(6) 357-362 https://doi.org/10.1071/ZO07022
Submitted: 23 April 2007 Accepted: 18 April 2008 Published: 21 May 2008
Abstract
Social factors influencing the trade-off between egg size and number have been almost entirely neglected in studies of social insects. We examined egg size and number in an Australian allodapine bee where nutritional resource availability and social competition during egg laying vary over colony development. We hypothesised that during August queens should lay many eggs to provide work incentives for subordinates, but because resources are strongly limited these eggs will be small. In spring, resources are less limited but some subordinates also lay eggs, resulting in competition between offspring for communally provided food. Here, we hypothesised that females should attempt to direct resources preferentially to their own offspring by laying large eggs. We analysed egg numbers and weights as functions of colony size. We found that a trade-off existed in August nests but that egg size increased with egg number in October. In November, when larval eclosion was commencing, colonies with larvae had smaller mean egg weights than those with only eggs, suggesting that resources are directed away from oviposition towards larval provisioning. Our analyses suggest that egg size is a function of egg number, rather than colony size per se.
Acknowledgements
We thank Luke Chenoweth, Jaclyn Smith and Meg Schwarz for help with fieldwork and Jaclyn Smith, Michael McLeish, Tom Chapman, Bill Wcislo, Miranda Dijskman and three anonymous reviewers for helpful comments and suggestions on this manuscript. This work was supported by Australian Research Council grants to M. P. Schwarz.
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