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- Gyne abstract "Gyne is the primary reproductive female caste of social insects (especially ants, wasps, and bees of order Hymenoptera). Gynes are those destined to become queens, whereas female workers are typically sterile and cannot become queens. A colony with multiple queens is said to be a polygyne form, whereas with only one is a monogyne form.The fire ant Solenopsis invicta is known to have colonies in both polygyne and monogyne forms.The small red ant, Leptothorax acervorum, has colonies that switch from monogyny to polygyny as a result of seasonal fluctuations.In the wasp species Apoica flavissima queens display distinct morphological differences from the sterile worker class. In Ropalidia plebeiana, gynes do not stay in the nest after they emerge as adults, but may spend their winters in their maternal nests. In species lacking morphological castes (i.e., where "workers" may not be sterile), the term "gyne" is usually reserved for those females whose entire life is spent as a reproductive or potential reproductive, as opposed to those who start life as a worker and subsequently attain reproductive status (often called a "replacement queen" or a "laying worker"). In most species with annual colony cycles, only gynes can enter diapause and overwinter, while workers – both non-reproductive and reproductive – die off. In some groups, such as paper wasps, gynes will join with other gynes at the time of nest founding, and may be relegated to subordinate reproductive roles, so being a gyne does not guarantee that a female will become a queen.".
- Gyne wikiPageExternalLink WILINS.html.
- Gyne wikiPageID "8031532".
- Gyne wikiPageLength "2786".
- Gyne wikiPageOutDegree "19".
- Gyne wikiPageRevisionID "655849487".
- Gyne wikiPageWikiLink Ant.
- Gyne wikiPageWikiLink Apoica_flavissima.
- Gyne wikiPageWikiLink Bee.
- Gyne wikiPageWikiLink Caste.
- Gyne wikiPageWikiLink Category:Insect_ecology.
- Gyne wikiPageWikiLink Category:Sociobiology.
- Gyne wikiPageWikiLink Diapause.
- Gyne wikiPageWikiLink E.O._Wilson.
- Gyne wikiPageWikiLink E._O._Wilson.
- Gyne wikiPageWikiLink Eusociality.
- Gyne wikiPageWikiLink Harvard_University_Press.
- Gyne wikiPageWikiLink Hymenoptera.
- Gyne wikiPageWikiLink Leptothorax_acervorum.
- Gyne wikiPageWikiLink Polistes.
- Gyne wikiPageWikiLink Queen_ant.
- Gyne wikiPageWikiLink Queen_bee.
- Gyne wikiPageWikiLink Red_imported_fire_ant.
- Gyne wikiPageWikiLink Ropalidia_plebeiana.
- Gyne wikiPageWikiLink Social_insect.
- Gyne wikiPageWikiLink Wasp.
- Gyne wikiPageWikiLinkText "Gyne".
- Gyne wikiPageWikiLinkText "Queen".
- Gyne wikiPageWikiLinkText "gyne".
- Gyne wikiPageWikiLinkText "gynes".
- Gyne wikiPageWikiLinkText "monogyne".
- Gyne wikiPageWikiLinkText "monogynous".
- Gyne wikiPageWikiLinkText "polygyne".
- Gyne wikiPageWikiLinkText "polygynous".
- Gyne wikiPageWikiLinkText "queen".
- Gyne wikiPageWikiLinkText "queens".
- Gyne hasPhotoCollection Gyne.
- Gyne wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Redirect.
- Gyne wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Gyne subject Category:Insect_ecology.
- Gyne subject Category:Sociobiology.
- Gyne hypernym Caste.
- Gyne type EthnicGroup.
- Gyne type Science.
- Gyne type Subfield.
- Gyne comment "Gyne is the primary reproductive female caste of social insects (especially ants, wasps, and bees of order Hymenoptera). Gynes are those destined to become queens, whereas female workers are typically sterile and cannot become queens.".
- Gyne label "Gyne".
- Gyne sameAs Gynomorphe.
- Gyne sameAs Monogyne.
- Gyne sameAs m.026p4xs.
- Gyne sameAs Q1558453.
- Gyne sameAs Q1558453.
- Gyne wasDerivedFrom Gyne?oldid=655849487.
- Gyne isPrimaryTopicOf Gyne.