Genetic relatedness within colonies The typical
Hymenopteran haplo-diploid genetic system of relatedness—where females share a 0.75-degree of relatedness with their sisters and only a 0.50-degree with their brothers—is not found in
P. tabidus. Workers of
P. tabidus share elevated relatedness and, thus, benefit through cooperation in aiding relatives and swarm-founding.
Cyclical oligogyny P. tabidus exhibits cyclical oligogyny, where queen number varies with colony cycle. After several generations of production of workers and future queens, a subset of many workers and queens leave the original colony to begin a new colony. The number of queens in a colony must be reduced to one or a few queens before new queens are produced. Cyclical oligogyny is maintained by worker control of sex ratios. When there is only one or a few queens, workers are three times as related to females as they are to males. However, when there are more queens, workers are equally related to males and females. As a result, workers prefer to produce new queens when colonies have few queens and males when colonies have many queens. Cyclical oligogyny has evolved independently in the
Neotropical epiponine swarm-founding wasps, such as
Polybia emaciata. Possible costs of cyclical oligogyny Having a limited number of queens in a colony increases the risks associated with queen loss. This cost is not as great when more queens can easily be produced to replace the queens lost. However, it is suggested that caste determination in
P. tabidus occurs early in development. Thus, queens are typically the only females that have reproductive ability. A consequence of limited reproductive ability is that queens are not easily replaced. Another cost of cyclical oligogyny is reproductive efficiency.
P. tabidus queens have three
ovarioles, Compared to single-queen
Vespa colonies of similar size where queens have up to twelve ovarioles. This makes brood production difficult when there is only one queen. However, this case is rare and is therefore not detrimental toward reproductive
fecundity. Reduced queen number typically occurs in a new swarm. Mature swarms are large and have many queens that produce males and new swarms.
Worker control and policing Workers are more related to their own sons than to the queen's sons. However, workers are more related to the queen's sons than sons of other workers. This is because swarm-founding colonies are typically large and have multiple queens, making workers more related to queens than other workers. Because of the difference in degree of relatedness, a worker would be more inclined to care for the queen’s sons than to a son of another worker. Worker policing effectively preserves the collective interests of the colony by controlling the production of males within a colony and limiting male production to only the queen. Another situation of worker policing is found in cyclical oligogyny, where males are only produced when there are multiple queens in the colony and workers are equally related to males and females. Workers typically participate in
worker policing when the degree of relatedness between workers is relatively low. == Interaction with other species ==