INIBIOMA   20415
INSTITUTO DE INVESTIGACIONES EN BIODIVERSIDAD Y MEDIOAMBIENTE
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Influence of inbreeding in the early stages of artificially reared colonies of Bombus terrestris
Autor/es:
ZAVATTA, LAURA; FIORILLO, FABIO; BOGO, GHERARDO; BORTOLOTTI, LAURA; DE ROGATIS, ANNA
Revista:
JOURNAL OF APPLIED ENTOMOLOGY
Editorial:
WILEY-BLACKWELL PUBLISHING, INC
Referencias:
Año: 2020
ISSN:
0931-2048
Resumen:
In the present study on the bumble bee Bombus terrestris we investigated the influence of inbreeding on queen fitness by comparing diapause survival and egg laying success of queens mated with nestmate and non-nestmate males. We then compared the early stage of colonies with or without diploid males and analyzed colony characteristics to identify a factor predictive of colony outcome. Diapause survival was no different between queens mated with nestmates and non-nestmates, but in the latter case, egg laying success was significantly higher. Queens mated with nestmates gave rise to a percentage of diploid male colonies (52.6%) compatible with brother-sister coupling. We obtained 18.6% of colonies with diploid males even from queens mated with non-nestmates, indicating that the colonies of origin were in some way related or homozygous at the sex determination loci. There was no difference in the early growth stage between colonies with or without diploid males, except in the number of workers emerging in the first brood, which was significantly higher in the latter. Among diploid male colonies, the number of workers and the male/worker ratio in the first brood was highly variable and was not a good predictor of subsequent colony growth. Out of 49 colonies with diploid males that reached full development, only 11 had a sufficient size to assume that they could survive in the field or, in a commercial breeding, to be suitable for pollination purposes.