0000000000001930

AUTHOR

Dirk Metzler

showing 4 related works from this author

Oh sister, where art thou? Spatial population structure and the evolution of an altruistic defence trait.

2014

The evolution of parasite virulence and host defences is affected by population structure. This effect has been confirmed in studies focusing on large spatial scales, whereas the importance of local structure is not well understood. Slavemaking ants are social parasites that exploit workers of another species to rear their offspring. Enslaved workers of the host species Temnothorax longispinosus have been found to exhibit an effective post-enslavement defence behaviour: enslaved workers were observed killing a large proportion of the parasites’ offspring. As enslaved workers do not reproduce, they gain no direct fitness benefit from this ‘rebellion’ behaviour. However, there may be an indir…

Maleeducation.field_of_studyEcologyHost (biology)Range (biology)PopulationPopulation structurePopulation DynamicsKin selectionBiologySisterAltruismBiological EvolutionHymenopteraModels BiologicalHost-Parasite InteractionsNestTraitAnimalsFemaleeducationSocial BehaviorEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of evolutionary biology
researchProduct

The influence of space and time on the evolution of altruistic defence: the case of ant slave rebellion.

2016

How can antiparasite defence traits evolve even if they do not directly benefit their carriers? An example of such an indirect defence is rebellion of enslaved Temnothorax longispinosus ant workers against their social parasite Temnothorax americanus, a slavemaking ant. Ant slaves have been observed to kill their oppressors' offspring, a behaviour from which the sterile slaves cannot profit directly. Parasite brood killing could, however, reduce raiding pressure on related host colonies nearby. We analyse with extensive computer simulations for the Temnothorax slavemaker system under what conditions a hypothetical rebel allele could invade a host population, and in particular, how host-para…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicinePopulationMetapopulationKin selection010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesHost-Parasite Interactions03 medical and health sciencesAnimalsComputer SimulationeducationSocial BehaviorEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicseducation.field_of_studyTemnothoraxbiologyEcologyAntsInclusive fitnessTemnothorax americanusbiology.organism_classificationAltruismBrood030104 developmental biologyTraitJournal of evolutionary biology
researchProduct

Macro- and microgeographic genetic structure in an ant species with alternative reproductive tactics in sexuals

2011

The genetic structure of social insect populations is influenced by their social organization and dispersal modes. The ant Hypoponera opacior shows diverse reproductive behaviours with regular cycles of outbreeding via winged sexuals and inbreeding via within-nest mating wingless sexuals that reproduce by budding. This unusual life cycle should be reflected in the genetic population structure, and we studied this on different scales using microsatellites. On a macrogeographic scale, populations were considerably structured and migration rates within the Chiricahuas were higher than those in between mountain ranges. On a local scale, our analyses revealed population viscosity through depende…

Genetic diversityeducation.field_of_studyEvolutionary biologyOutbreeding depressionGenetic variationGenetic structurePopulationBiological dispersalPopulation geneticsBiologyeducationInbreedingEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Evolutionary Biology
researchProduct

Data from: Macro- and microgeographic genetic structure in an ant species with alternative reproductive tactics in sexuals

2011

The genetic structure of social insect populations is influenced by their social organisation and dispersal modes. The ant Hypoponera opacior shows diverse reproductive behaviours with regular cycles of outbreeding via winged sexuals and inbreeding via within-nest mating wingless sexuals that reproduce by budding. This unusual life cycle should be reflected in the genetic population structure and we studied this on different scales using microsatellites. On a macrogeographic scale, populations were considerably structured and migration rates within the Chiricahuas were higher than those in-between mountain ranges. On a local scale, our analyses revealed population viscosity through dependan…

medicine and health carealternative mating strategiesLife SciencesMedicineHypoponera opacior
researchProduct