Abstract
Ant societies are primarily composed of females, whereby labor is
divided into reproductive and non-reproductive, worker, castes. Workers
and reproductive queens can differ greatly in behavior, longevity,
physiology, and morphology, but their differences are usually modest
relative to the differences relative to males. Males are short-lived,
typically do not provide the colony with labor, often look like a
different species, and only occur seasonally. It is these differences
that have historically led to their neglect in social insect research,
but also why they may facilitate novel phenotypic variation – by
increasing the phenotypic variability that is available for selection.
In this study, worker variation along a size-shape axis corresponded
with variation in male-queen size and shape. As worker variation
increased within species, so did sexual variation. Across species in two
independent genera, sexual size dimorphism correlated with worker
polymorphism regardless of whether the ancestral condition was large or
small worker/sexual dimorphism. These results, along with mounting
molecular data showing that process of queen-worker caste determination
has co-opted many genes/pathways from sex determination, lead to the
hypothesis that sexual selection and selection on colony-level traits
are non-independent and that sexual dimorphism may even have facilitated
the evolution of the distinct worker caste.