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Dryad

Evolution of odorant receptor repertoires across Hymenoptera is not linked to the evolution of eusociality

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Aug 15, 2024 version files 43.81 MB

Abstract

Communication is essential for social organisms. In eusocial insects, olfaction facilitates communication and recognition between nestmates. The study of certain model organisms has led to the hypothesis that odorant receptors are expanded in eusocial Hymenoptera. This has become a widely mentioned idea in the literature, albeit with conflicting reports, and has not been tested with a broad comparative analysis. Here we combined existing genomic and new neuroanatomical data, including from a ~100 million-year-old fossil ant, across a phylogenetically broad sample of hymenopteran lineages. We find no evidence that variation in the size and evolutionary tempo of odorant receptor repertoires is related to eusociality. Post-hoc exploration of our data hinted at the loss of flight as a possible factor shaping some of the variation in OR repertoires in Hymenoptera. Nevertheless, our analyses revealed a complex pattern of evolutionary variation and raised new questions about the ecological, behavioral, and social factors that shape olfactory abilities.