He clones, she clones: dad, mom ants as different species.A study of the insects called little fire ants may be as close as science gets to showing males and females as separate species. Those species still share a name, Wasmannia auropunctata. The little fire ants live in seemingly unexceptional un·ex·cep·tion·al adj. 1. Not varying from a norm; usual. 2. Not subject to exceptions; absolute. See Usage Note at unexceptionable. un colonies with several queens, many sterile female workers, and a smaller number of males. Yet a genetic analysis shows that daughter queens are clones of their mother, says Denis Denis, king of Portugal: see Diniz. Fournier of the Free University of Brussels The Free University of Brussels may refer to one of two Belgian universities, both located in Brussels, Belgium:
Fournier says that the researchers discovered this arrangement by chance as they collected fire ant nests from various sites in French Guiana. W. auropunctata isn't the imported red fire ant bedeviling the southern United States The Southern United States—commonly referred to as the American South, Dixie, or simply the South—constitutes a large distinctive region in the southeastern and south-central United States. , but the little fire ant does sting and is spreading through the tropics to become a menace in its own right. As the researchers studied DNA DNA: see nucleic acid. DNA or deoxyribonucleic acid One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes. at 11 spots on little fire ant chromosomes, odd patterns emerged. In 33 out of 34 nests, queens within a particular nest matched each other's genes. Yet the sterile workers' genetic makeup didn't match that of their queens but represented the sort of mix expected from sexual reproduction. That pattern had been previously reported in only one other ant, Cataglyphis cursor. Fouruier proposes that because W. auropunctata males get shut out of parenting a queen, a countermeasure has evolved. During research on the species in New Caledonia, the team found that within a particular nest, genes of all males, including larval ones, matched each other and the genes in the sperm in the queens' storage organs. The males' genes, however, differed from the queens' genes at 10 of the 11 comparison points. Therefore, male genes in some eggs probably got rid of the queens' genes, says Fournier. "Males thwart the queens by eliminating the female genome in [some] fertilized fer·til·ize v. fer·til·ized, fer·til·iz·ing, fer·til·iz·es v.tr. 1. To cause the fertilization of (an ovum, for example). 2. eggs," he suggests. "We could think of the males as a separate, parasitic species that uses host eggs for its own reproduction." Genome elimination has turned up before--in some fish, amphibians, and insects--but in those cases, the females' genes wipe out the males'. Behavioral ecologist Andrew Bourke of the Zoological Society of London The Zoological Society of London (sometimes known by the abbreviation ZSL) is a learned society founded in London in April 1826 by Sir Thomas Stamford Raffles, Lord Auckland, Sir Humphry Davy, Joseph Sabine, Nicholas Aylward Vigors and other eminent naturalists. describes the idea of a male ant essentially cloning itself as "plausible." If more studies confirm that the males' genes eliminate the females', the little fire ants provide "a very interesting example of sexual conflict," he says. Yet it's not total war in the fire ant nest, points out another analyst of social insects. Both the males and queens need the sterile workers and apparently benefit from those workers' genetic diversity, which comes from sex, notes Ross Crozier crozier see crosier. of James Cook University Situated in the tropical gardens of the campus, the halls of residence provide students with modern social and sporting facilities as well as the opportunity to choose between catered or self-catered accommodation. in Townsville, Australia. There may be a battle between the fire ant sexes, says Crozier, but "even here they really still need each other." |
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