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Department of Biology
Institute of Plant Science and Microbiology
    Division BEE  >  Biodiversity & Ecology  >  Vol.7 >  Article 4.4c

Biodiversity & Ecology

 4 Debate    Book chapter 4.4    Open Access 

Reproduction of sand termites and local genetic patterns


Felicitas Gunter*, Jens Oldeland, Joh R. Henschel, Mike D. Picker & Norbert Jürgens

Article first published online: 15 December 2022

DOI: 10.7809/b-e.00365

*Corresponding author contact: felicitas-gunter@web.de

Biodiversity & Ecology  (Biodivers. Ecol.)

Volume 7, pages 54-55, November 2022
  PDF  (1.6 MB)

Keywords: Psammotermes, sand termite, AFLP, Fairy circle, Genetic diversity, reproduction

Abstract: Fairy circles are created, used and maintained by sand termites of the species complex Psammotermes allocerus. We used Amplified Fragment Length Analyses (AFLP) for a study of the genetic diversity pattern of termites from clusters of neighboring fairy circles. Our results suggest that all termites found within one fairy circle genetically are members of one colony. The neighboring colonies are genetically differing from each other. This observation supports the hypothesis that colonies are founded by reproductive alates flying in from further away and not by budding from a near-by colony.

Suggested citation:
Gunter, F.*, Oldeland, J., Henschel, J.R., Picker, M.D., Jürgens, N. (2022): Reproduction of sand termites and local genetic patterns – In: Schmiedel, U. & Finckh, M. (Eds.) Fairy circles of the Namib Desert – Ecosystem engineering by subterranean social insects. – Biodiversity & Ecology 7: 54-55. DOI: 10.7809/b-e.00365.