Supercolonial structure of invasive populations of the tawny crazy ant Nylanderia fulva in the US.
Pierre-Andre EyerBryant McDowellLaura N L JohnsonLuis A CalcaterraMaria Belen FernandezDeWayne ShoemakerRobert T PuckettEdward L VargoPublished in: BMC evolutionary biology (2018)
Overall, these results suggest that across its entire invasive range in the U.S.A., this species forms a single supercolony spreading more than 2000 km. In each invasive nest, we found several, up to hundreds, of reproductive queens, each being mated with a single male. The many reproductive queens per nests, together with the free movement of individuals between nests, leads to a relatedness coefficient among nestmate workers close to zero in introduced populations, calling into question the stability of this unicolonial system in which indirect fitness benefits to workers is apparently absent.