Cross-activity of honeybee queen pheromones in bumblebees provides evidence for sensory exploitation
Sarah A. Princen, Annette Van Oystaeyen, Clément Petit, Jelle S. Van Zweden & Tom Wenseleers
The evolutionary origin of queen pheromones, which regulate reproductive division of labor in insect societies, has been explained by two evolutionary scenarios: the sender-precursor hypothesis and the sensory exploitation hypothesis. These scenarios differ in terms of whether the signaling system was built on preadaptations on the part of either the sender queens or the receiver workers. While some social insect queen pheromones – such as cuticular hydrocarbons – were likely derived from ancestral fertility cues...
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