http://rspb.royalsoc.../1774/20132396
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The link didn't work.
same
All my colonies are dead.
Except:
Pogonomyrmex barbatus
Pheidole obscurithorax
Pheidole morens
From what I understand through my own research, this exists in all hymenopterans to an extent.
As most of us know, bees, wasps, and ants all use the haploid/diploid sex determination system, with males being haploid and gynes(queens) and workers being female. Hybridogenesis is a form of reproduction in which an organism discards a genome of the opposite sex and uses its own to create offspring. In most hymenopterans, this would be the queen or female wasp/bee/ant not using the sexually obtained male genome and using only its own. This would be a haploid creature which would be male.
Thank you. Sorry for the bad link, i can't find it again
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