TY - JOUR
T1 - Thoracic crop formation is spatiotemporally coordinated with flight muscle histolysis during claustral colony foundation in Lasius japonicus queens
AU - Kurihara, Yuta
AU - Ogawa, Kota
AU - Chiba, Yudai
AU - Hayashi, Yoshinobu
AU - Miyazaki, Satoshi
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank Hiromi Tanaka, Toshimi Hidaka, and other lab members at Tamagawa University for their assistance in field sampling, colony maintenance, and laboratory work. We also thank the two anonymous reviewers for constructive comments. This work was supported by JSPS KAKENHI (Grant Numbers JP19K06860 to SM and JP20K06816 to YH). We would like to thank the Language Editing Service of Elsevier for the English language review.
Funding Information:
Claustral founding queens provide essential macronutrients such as lipids and proteins for their first larvae, and such macronutrients come from their body reserves. In claustral ICF species, young virgin queens possess enormous flight muscles (relative to their body mass) in the thorax and well-developed abdominal fat bodies (Hölldobler and Wilson, 1990; Peeters, 2020). Fat bodies are a major source of lipids and storage proteins, such as hexamerin (Wheeler and Buck, 1995, 1996; Hahn et al., 2004). The lipids and proteins stored in the abdomens of founding queens are depleted during claustral ICF, supporting the notion that these are transferred to the broods (Wheeler and Buck, 1996). In addition, voluminous thoraces with enormous flight muscles are specialized traits for claustral ICF (Peeters and Ito 2001). Because queens do not fly again after their mating flight, flight muscles start to be histolyzed shortly after landing and release a large amount of protein resources (Hölldobler and Wilson, 1990; Wheeler and Buck, 1996; Jensen and Børgesen, 2000). Flight muscle histolysis of Lasius niger was originally described by Janet (1907) and then in greater detail by Matte and Billen (2021).We thank Hiromi Tanaka, Toshimi Hidaka, and other lab members at Tamagawa University for their assistance in field sampling, colony maintenance, and laboratory work. We also thank the two anonymous reviewers for constructive comments. This work was supported by JSPS KAKENHI (Grant Numbers JP19K06860 to SM and JP20K06816 to YH). We would like to thank the Language Editing Service of Elsevier for the English language review.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2022/7
Y1 - 2022/7
N2 - In a majority of ants, a newly mated queen independently founds a colony and claustrally raises her first brood without foraging outside the nest. During claustral independent colony foundation (ICF) in several ants, the esophagus of the founding queen expands and develops into a “thoracic crop,” which is then filled with a liquid substrate for larval feeding. It has been suggested that these substrates are converted from the founding queen's body reserves (e.g., histolyzed flight muscles) or redistributed from a gastral crop. Here, we describe thoracic crop development in Lasius japonicus queens during claustral ICF. The foundresses claustrally feed their larvae from weeks 2–5 after ICF onset, and the first worker emerges at week 6. The development proceeds as follows: in week 0, the foundress' dorsal esophageal wall is pleated and thickened. Then, from weeks 2–5, the esophagus expands toward a dorsal space previously occupied by flight muscles, following flight muscle histolysis. Gastral crop expansion follows esophageal expansion. Thus, thoracic crop formation may be spatiotemporally coordinated with flight muscle histolysis in Lasius japonicus queens, and similar developmental regulations might be common in other claustral ICF ants.
AB - In a majority of ants, a newly mated queen independently founds a colony and claustrally raises her first brood without foraging outside the nest. During claustral independent colony foundation (ICF) in several ants, the esophagus of the founding queen expands and develops into a “thoracic crop,” which is then filled with a liquid substrate for larval feeding. It has been suggested that these substrates are converted from the founding queen's body reserves (e.g., histolyzed flight muscles) or redistributed from a gastral crop. Here, we describe thoracic crop development in Lasius japonicus queens during claustral ICF. The foundresses claustrally feed their larvae from weeks 2–5 after ICF onset, and the first worker emerges at week 6. The development proceeds as follows: in week 0, the foundress' dorsal esophageal wall is pleated and thickened. Then, from weeks 2–5, the esophagus expands toward a dorsal space previously occupied by flight muscles, following flight muscle histolysis. Gastral crop expansion follows esophageal expansion. Thus, thoracic crop formation may be spatiotemporally coordinated with flight muscle histolysis in Lasius japonicus queens, and similar developmental regulations might be common in other claustral ICF ants.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.asd.2022.101169
DO - 10.1016/j.asd.2022.101169
M3 - Article
C2 - 35660224
AN - SCOPUS:85131144298
SN - 1467-8039
VL - 69
JO - Arthropod Structure and Development
JF - Arthropod Structure and Development
M1 - 101169
ER -