“When an animal parent has a child, both will belong to the
same species. Humans beget humans, combfish beget combfish, and green
tinkerbirds beget green tinkerbirds. Outside of the occasional hybrid (like a mule
or a wholphin), this just seems like an incontrovertible fact of biology.
It took an ant to find a way out of this seemingly airtight
setup.
In a paper
published earlier this month in Nature, researchers reported how queens of the
Mediterranean harvester ant species Messor ibericus could produce male
offspring of a different species, Messor structor. The M. ibericus ants then
used the M. structor males to create hybrid workers who supported the colony.
This strategy — in which one species needs to produce
offspring belonging to another species — has not been seen before in any
creature. The researchers call it “xenoparity,” or “foreign birth.”
“It’s crazy,” said Jonathan Romiguier, a biologist at the
Institute of Evolutionary Science at the University of Montpellier in France
and an author of the paper. “Sci-fi material.”
Ant colonies are highly structured, with individual insects
sticking to specific roles. In harvester ant societies, female queens create
offspring, and male drones provide sperm. Sterile female workers take care of
pretty much everything else, including nest building, child care, and making
and distributing “ant bread,” or crushed seeds mixed with saliva.
Studying M.
ibericus, Dr. Romiguier noticed something “really, really abnormal,” he said.
Nearly all the workers in their colonies were first-generation hybrids —
crosses between their own species and another harvester ant, M. structor.
The
hybridization itself is not so unusual. A number of ant queens mate with male
drones of other species to produce hybrid workers, a strategy called “sperm
parasitism.” Although the offspring are typically sterile, it’s not a problem,
because reproduction isn’t their job.
These hybrid
workers may be stronger and healthier than purebred workers. Or the queens may
have “selfish” genes: In some cases, queen ants who reproduce with drones of
their own species can only create other queens, and must hybridize with a
different species in order to create workers at all, Dr. Romiguier said.
But M.
ibericus shouldn’t have the opportunity to parasitize sperm from M. structor.
While the ranges of the two species once overlapped, they now diverge in many
places. Some M. ibericus colonies with hybrid workers are hundreds of miles
from the closest M. structor colony. How are the M. ibericus queens even
finding M. structor drone-dads to father their hybrid workers?
To
investigate, Dr. Romiguier and his team began DNA-testing M. ibericus colonies
in the wild and in the lab. They found a number of M. structor drones living
among the M. ibericus ants and the hybrids.
Furthermore,
they found that all the drones within the colonies — whether M. ibericus or M.
structor — had mitochondrial DNA from M. ibericus. Because this type of DNA is
always maternally inherited, this meant ants from both species had M. ibericus
queen-mothers.
When they started their research, the idea that M. ibericus
queens could lay two species of eggs was “like a joke” among the team members,
Dr. Romiguier said. As sampling efforts went on, it became a more serious
hypothesis.
Then they
isolated M. ibericus queens and tested the eggs they laid. Nearly 10 percent
were fully M. structor. They watched males of both species reach adulthood.
After that, “we had to face the facts,” he said: M. ibericus queens were not
finding M. structor drones, but making them.
M. ibericus and M. structor diverged about five million
years ago, a period “equal to the human-chimp divergence,” said Dr. Romiguier.
So is this like a human having a chimpanzee baby?
It’s actually weirder than that.
“It’s like a human having chimp babies,” which they use as
“a source of sperm for giving birth to human-chimp hybrids that would do all
their tasks,” Dr. Romiguier said.
Strategically, though, it makes sense.
“If you can produce at home the males you need, everything
is easier,” he said, comparing it to humans domesticating animals, rather than
going out to hunt them.
Gary Umphrey, a professor of statistics at the University of
Guelph in Ontario who coined the term “sperm parasitism,” called the research
“fabulous.” Papers like this are “setting off a gold rush into ant genetic
research” and pushing our understanding of hybridization, he said.
But though he is excited, he is less surprised. “I look at
evolution as DNA finding ways to keep reproducing,” he said. “This is just
another very cool way.”
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