Abstract
A ‘green-beard’ gene is defined as a gene that causes a phenotypic effect (such as the presence of a green beard or any other conspicuous feature), allows the bearer of this feature to recognize it in other individuals, and causes the bearer to behave differently towards other individuals depending on whether or not they possess the feature1,2,3. Such genes have been proposed on theoretical grounds to be agents mediating both altruism and intragenomic conflicts1,2, but until now few, if any, of these genes have been identified4,5. Here we provide evidence of a green-beard gene in the red imported fire ant, Solenopsis invicta. In polygyne (multiple-queen) colonies, all egg-laying queens are Bb heterozygotes at the locus Gp-9 (ref. 6). Previous studies suggested that bb females die prematurely from intrinsic causes6; we now show that BB queens initiating reproduction are killed by workers, and that it is primarily Bb rather than BB workers that are responsible for these executions. This implies that allele Gp-9b is linked to a green-beard allele that preferentially induces workers bearing the allele to kill all queens that do not bear it. Workers appear to distinguish BB from Bb queens on the basis of a transferable odour cue.
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Acknowledgements
We thank A. Bourke, C. DeHeer, J. Evans, M. Goodisman, D. Haig, L. Hurst and D.Queller for comments on the manuscript. This work was funded by grants from the Swiss and US National Science Foundations and the National Geographic Society.
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Keller, L., Ross, K. Selfish genes: a green beard in the red fire ant. Nature 394, 573–575 (1998). https://doi.org/10.1038/29064
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/29064
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