Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5922216 Journal of Insect Physiology 2011 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

Caste systems and the division of labor they make possible are common underlying features of all social insects. Multiple extrinsic factors have been shown to impact caste composition in social insect colonies. Primer pheromones are one type of extrinsic caste-regulatory factor; they are chemical signaling molecules produced by certain colony members to impact developmental physiology of recipient nestmates. However, only limited evidence exists regarding primer pheromones and their actions in eusocial termites. In previous research we identified two soldier-produced terpenes, γ-cadinene (CAD) and γ-cadinenal (ALD), as candidate primer pheromones of the lower termite Reticulitermes flavipes. In the present study we tested hypotheses related to CAD and ALD action in recipient individuals. We examined the influences of terminally developed soldier termites on (1) CAD and ALD levels and (2) caste differentiation in developmentally totipotent workers. Our findings show CAD and ALD (respectively) are caste stimulatory and inhibitory components of chemical blends present in soldier heads, ALD levels increase significantly (10.9×) in workers only in the presence of soldiers, and soldiers can reduce developmental-hormone response thresholds of workers, presumably via ALD action. These findings provide novel evidence supporting that CAD and ALD are authentic caste-regulatory primer pheromones in Reticulitermes.

Graphical abstractDownload full-size imageHighlights► Two candidate primer pheromones from termites were studied: cadinene (CAD)and its aldehyde (ALD). ► Worker termites accumulated both CAD and ALD when held with soldiers. ► ALD reduced juvenile hormone (JH) dependent presoldier formation by workers. ► Soldier termites also reduced JH-dependent presoldier differentiation by workers. ► Findings suggest that CAD and ALD impact soldier formation by modulating JH efficacy.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Insect Science
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