Behavioral Ecology Symposium--'85: First Steps into Eusociality: The Sweat Bee Dialictus Lineatulus
Abstract
The primitively eusocial halictid bee Dialictus lineatulus has two generations per year in New York. Spring nests are initiated by one to six female bees; in multifoundress nests all bees are potentially reproductive but the largest individual doesn't forage. Summer nests contain an average of seven female bees which occur in reproductive castes, with workers almost the same size as queens. Some summer nests briefly form eusocial colonies where the foundress queen lives with her worker daughters. Foundress bees soon die in the summer, and most nests are then semisocial and contain only summer generation bees. The replacement queens are the dominant and older sisters of the workers. I hypothesize that reproductive castes first evolved in such sister associations due to environmental factors that prohibit subordinate bees from leaving and successfully starting their own nests.Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright for any article published in Florida Entomologist is held by the author(s) of the article. Florida Entomologist is an open access journal. Florida Entomologist follows terms of the Creative Commons, Attribution Non-Commercial License (cc by-nc). By submitting and publishing articles in Florida Entomologist, authors grant the FOJ and Florida Entomologist's host institutions permission to make the article available through Internet posting and electronic dissemination, and to otherwise archive the information contained both electronically and in a hard printed version. When used, information and images obtained from articles must be referenced and cited appropriately. Articles may be reproduced for personal, educational, or archival purposes, or any non-commercial use. Permission should be sought from the author(s) for multiple, non-commercial reproduction. Written permission from the author(s) is required for any commercial reproduction.