In the haploid male ant, I assume these must occur in preparation for mating:
(1) Germ cells do not start meiosis.
(2) Germ cells are converted to sperm cells.
Are these assumptions correct?
Obviously something works; I'm curious about the details.
Regarding (1), meiosis generally works only with diploid germ cells, correct?
Whereas the gene works OK with female ants, is it turned off for males?
Or does the gene interrogate the germ cells? Such interrogation would be wasted on 99% of the germ cells.
Regarding (2), the final part of spermatogenesis, following meiosis:
"Spermatids mature further in a developmental process called spermiogenesis, becoming
spermatozoa."
http://en.wikipedia....ki/Spermatocyte
Do these descripitions apply to insects as well?
Do the male genes that cause spermiogenesis recognize/utilize the haploid germ cells, bypassing meiosis?
Do all cells have a basic identification, so that genes know which ones to process?
Or does a male ant send a germ cell (not a mature spermatozoa) to the female?