PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Nicholas G. Davies AU - Andy Gardner TI - Monogamy promotes worker sterility in insect societies AID - 10.1101/059154 DP - 2016 Jan 01 TA - bioRxiv PG - 059154 4099 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2016/06/16/059154.short 4100 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2016/06/16/059154.full AB - Inclusive-fitness theory highlights monogamy as a key driver of altruistic sib-rearing. Accordingly, monogamy should promote the evolution of worker sterility in social insects when sterile workers make for better helpers. However, a recent population-genetics analysis (Olejarz et al. 2015) found no clear effect of monogamy on worker sterility. Here, we revisit this analysis. First, we relax genetic assumptions, considering not only alleles of extreme effect—encoding either no sterility or complete sterility—but also alleles with intermediate worker-sterility effects. Second, we broaden the stability analysis—which focused on the invasibility of populations where either all workers are fully-sterile or all workers are fully-reproductive—to identify where intermediate pure or mixed evolutionarily-stable states may occur. Finally, we consider additional, demographically-explicit ecological scenarios relevant to worker non-reproduction. This extended analysis demonstrates that an exact population-genetics approach strongly supports the prediction of inclusive-fitness theory that monogamy promotes sib-directed altruism in social insects.