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429 points sampo | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
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corygarms ◴[] No.45302603[source]
This is nuts. If I'm understanding correctly, the M. ibiricus queen mates with a M. structor male, uses his sperm to create sterile, hybrid female worker ants for her colony, then she (astonishingly) can also lay eggs that develop into fertile M. structor males, which means she has removed her genetic material from the egg and effectively cloned the male she previously mated with.
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sjducb ◴[] No.45311222[source]
The original paper discusses this in more detail. There is a well understood phenomenon called sperm paratism where male sperm will take over the egg, instead of sexually reproducing with the egg.

In sexual reproduction the offspring has 50% of its genetic material from both parents. In sperm parasitism the offspring is 100% related to the male and the female’s genetic material has been destroyed.

These inbericus females are allowing the messor male line to reproduce by sperm parisitism to maintain a domesticated messor line that they can then later sexually reproduce with to create hybrid worker ants.

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-025-09425-w

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Torkel ◴[] No.45312083[source]
So the messor male line is without sexual reproduction. Essentially a clone army, all with identical genes?

I find it interesting that this has not led to all the clones knocked out by diseases, as happens to eg our banana plantations.

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Amezarak ◴[] No.45312304[source]
All M. structor's aren't clones, only in that colony.

They are out their in the wild reproducing with other M. structors sexually.

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noselasd ◴[] No.45312506[source]
I thought one of the big points was there's no M. structor females on the islands.
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1. Amezarak ◴[] No.45312753[source]
They've extended their range, so there's lots of cases where they don't have wild ones around, but there's still overlap, at least according to the article I read.