megalopta genalis
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2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mallory A. Hagadorn ◽  
Karlee Eck ◽  
Matthew Del Grosso ◽  
Xavier Haemmerle ◽  
William T. Wcislo ◽  
...  

AbstractA well-documented phenomenon among social insects is that brain changes occur prior to or at the onset of certain experiences, potentially serving to prime the brain for specific tasks. This insight comes almost exclusively from studies considering developmental maturation in females. As a result, it is unclear whether age-related brain plasticity is consistent across sexes, and to what extent developmental patterns differ. Using confocal microscopy and volumetric analyses, we investigated age-related brain changes coinciding with sexual maturation in the males of the facultatively eusocial sweat bee, Megalopta genalis, and the obligately eusocial bumble bee, Bombus impatiens. We compared volumetric measurements between newly eclosed and reproductively mature males kept isolated in the lab. We found expansion of the mushroom bodies—brain regions associated with learning and memory—with maturation, which were consistent across both species. This age-related plasticity may, therefore, play a functionally-relevant role in preparing male bees for mating, and suggests that developmentally-driven neural restructuring can occur in males, even in species where it is absent in females.


2020 ◽  
Vol 117 (24) ◽  
pp. 13615-13625 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karen M. Kapheim ◽  
Beryl M. Jones ◽  
Hailin Pan ◽  
Cai Li ◽  
Brock A. Harpur ◽  
...  

Developmental plasticity generates phenotypic variation, but how it contributes to evolutionary change is unclear. Phenotypes of individuals in caste-based (eusocial) societies are particularly sensitive to developmental processes, and the evolutionary origins of eusociality may be rooted in developmental plasticity of ancestral forms. We used an integrative genomics approach to evaluate the relationships among developmental plasticity, molecular evolution, and social behavior in a bee species (Megalopta genalis) that expresses flexible sociality, and thus provides a window into the factors that may have been important at the evolutionary origins of eusociality. We find that differences in social behavior are derived from genes that also regulate sex differentiation and metamorphosis. Positive selection on social traits is influenced by the function of these genes in development. We further identify evidence that social polyphenisms may become encoded in the genome via genetic changes in regulatory regions, specifically in transcription factor binding sites. Taken together, our results provide evidence that developmental plasticity provides the substrate for evolutionary novelty and shapes the selective landscape for molecular evolution in a major evolutionary innovation: Eusociality.


2019 ◽  
Vol 66 (3) ◽  
pp. 479-490 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. R. Smith ◽  
M. Simons ◽  
V. Bazarko ◽  
J. Harach ◽  
M. A. Seid
Keyword(s):  

2019 ◽  
Vol 15 (4) ◽  
pp. 20180740 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adam R. Smith ◽  
Karen M. Kapheim ◽  
Callum J. Kingwell ◽  
William T. Wcislo

A classic prediction of kin selection theory is that a mixed population of social and solitary nests of haplodiploid insects should exhibit a split sex ratio among offspring: female biased in social nests, male biased in solitary nests. Here, we provide the first evidence of a solitary–social split sex ratio, using the sweat bee Megalopta genalis (Halictidae). Data from 2502 offspring collected from naturally occurring nests across 6 years spanning the range of the M. genalis reproductive season show that despite significant yearly and seasonal variation, the offspring sex ratio of social nests is consistently more female biased than in solitary nests. This suggests that split sex ratios may facilitate the evolutionary origins of cooperation based on reproductive altruism via kin selection.


2017 ◽  
Vol 65 (1) ◽  
pp. 85-93 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adam Smith ◽  
Christine Harper ◽  
Karen Kapheim ◽  
Meagan Simons ◽  
Callum Kingwell ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 284 (1846) ◽  
pp. 20162228 ◽  
Author(s):  
Beryl M. Jones ◽  
Callum J. Kingwell ◽  
William T. Wcislo ◽  
Gene E. Robinson

Developmental plasticity may accelerate the evolution of phenotypic novelty through genetic accommodation, but studies of genetic accommodation often lack knowledge of the ancestral state to place selected traits in an evolutionary context. A promising approach for assessing genetic accommodation involves using a comparative framework to ask whether ancestral plasticity is related to the evolution of a particular trait. Bees are an excellent group for such comparisons because caste-based societies (eusociality) have evolved multiple times independently and extant species exhibit different modes of eusociality. We measured brain and abdominal gene expression in a facultatively eusocial bee, Megalopta genalis, and assessed whether plasticity in this species is functionally linked to eusocial traits in other bee lineages. Caste-biased abdominal genes in M. genalis overlapped significantly with caste-biased genes in obligately eusocial bees . Moreover, caste-biased genes in M. genalis overlapped significantly with genes shown to be rapidly evolving in multiple studies of 10 bee species, particularly for genes in the glycolysis pathway and other genes involved in metabolism. These results provide support for the idea that eusociality can evolve via genetic accommodation, with plasticity in facultatively eusocial species like M. genalis providing a substrate for selection during the evolution of caste in obligately eusocial lineages.


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