Haplodiploidy Bombus ignitus, like many bees, exhibit
Haplodiploidy.
Diploid queens produce diploid workers and new queens from fertilized eggs.
Haploid drones are produced from unfertilized eggs, laid by either the queen or workers. All sperm produced by a drone is identical, containing its exact haploid DNA. Variation arises from females, who produce genetically variant eggs through
meiosis. Sex is determined under a single-locus complementary sex determination (sl-CSD) system, where multiple alleles at a single locus determine the sex of an individual. Sex locus heterozygotes develop as females, while hemizygous and homozygous eggs develop as haploid and diploid males.
Genetic relatedness within colonies As the queens of
B. ignitus mate with only one male, the workers are more closely related to other workers (with whom they share an average of seventy five percent of their genes with) than to the queen (who they only share half their genes with). With respect to male offspring, workers are more closely related to the sons of other workers, sharing an average of 37.5 percent of their genes with them, than the sons of the queen, who they only share 25% of their genes with.
Worker queen conflict Worker policing, manifested through aggressive actions against fertile workers and removal of the eggs of workers, has been observed in colonies of
B. ignitus. Similarly, reproductive workers have been observed taking aggressive behavior against founding queens. These include eating the eggs laid by the queen and laying eggs themselves, as well as attacking the queen herself. In an analysis of seven
B. ignitus colonies, the survival rate of colony founding queens was 72%. These queens had damaged wings or bodies, which suggests numerous conflicts with workers. == Human importance ==