Haplodiploidy B. muscorum, like many bees, exhibit
haplodiploidy. The
diploid queens produce diploid workers and new queens from fertilized eggs.
Haploid males are produced from unfertilized eggs. Workers are also able to lay unfertilized eggs that develop into males.
Mating system B. muscorum is thought to be a
monandrous species; the queen mates only once with a single male to start a new colony. This monandrous behavior decreases the amount of genetic variation present in a single colony relative to that of a polygynous or
polyandrous species. As a result,
B. muscorum has an increased susceptibility to the effects of inbreeding. Queens may possess a distinctive odor that signals relatedness and prevents interbreeding. Studies have shown, however, that mating appears to be random.
Nest surveillance Male mating strategies of bumblebees can be grouped into four broad categories: patrolling, racing, territorial, and cruising. Males of
B. muscorum exhibit territorial strategies for mating. In this strategy, males choose a perch outside of a mature nest and pursue potential mates that it spots. Males compete with one another for preferred perches, each attempting to find a spot close to the nest entrance. When another bee flies too close to a perched male, the male sets off in pursuit for several seconds, seeking to either chase away a potential competitor or mount a potential mate. After the chase, one of the males will land back at the perch close to the nest.
Inbreeding As a result of small population sizes and haplodiploidy,
B. muscorum has an increased susceptibility to inbreeding. As sex is determined at a single locus, the overall fitness of a population is directly related to the number of different alleles at the sex locus, which in turn is related to the size and isolation of the population. When males mate with related queens, diploid males with reduced fertility and immune response are produced. 10 out of 14
B. muscorum populations in the
Hebrides showed significant signs of recent
bottlenecking. In recent years, diploid males have come to represent a considerable proportion of males within populations in the British Isles, suggesting an increase in inbreeding among populations. == Behavior ==