Behaviour and Social Evolution of Wasps: The Communal Aggregation Hypothesis

Behaviour and Social Evolution of Wasps: The Communal Aggregation Hypothesis

by Yosiaki Itï
Behaviour and Social Evolution of Wasps: The Communal Aggregation Hypothesis

Behaviour and Social Evolution of Wasps: The Communal Aggregation Hypothesis

by Yosiaki Itï

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Overview

In this book, Itô presents data on tropical wasps which suggest that kin-selection has been overemphasized as an evolutionary explanation of sociality. He concentrates on the Vespidae (paper wasps and hornets), a group much discussed by evolutionary biologists because it exhibits all stages of social evolution: subsociality, primitive eusociality, and advanced eusociality. The author reports field observations by himself and others in Central America, Asia, and Australia, showing that multiple egg-layers in a nest are not uncommon. Because coexistence of many 'queens' leads to lower relatedness among colony members than in single-queen colonies, he suggests that kin-selection may not be the most powerful force determining observed social patterns. Instead, subsocial wasps may first have aggregated for defense purposes in habitats with a high risk of predation, with mutualistic associations among many queens. Through parental manipulation and then kin selection, differentiation into within-generation castes may have followed. Of interest to all students of ecology, evolution, and behavior, this book beautifully demonstrates the author's ability to combine wide-ranging data with thoughtful questions.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780198540465
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 03/18/1993
Series: Oxford Series in Ecology and Evolution
Pages: 168
Product dimensions: 6.19(w) x 9.19(h) x 0.36(d)

About the Author

Nagoya University

Table of Contents

1. Systematics and Sociality of Wasps2. Theories on the Evolution of Eusociality3. Problems with the Kin-Selection Hypothesis4. Comparison of Dominance Relations and Proportion of Multi-Female Nests in the Polistinae5. Ropalidia fasciata in Okinawa, Japan6. A Species with Flexible Social Relations7. Social Relations in Wasp Colonies in the Wet Tropics8. Polistine Wasps in Panama9. Role of Multiple Comb Construction and Perennial Nature of Nests10. Polistine Wasps in Australia11. Multi-Queen Societies: Swarm-Founding Wasps in the Tropics12. Social Lives of the Other Social Wasps13. Origin of Pleometrosis14. Altruism or Mutualism? 15. Manipulation of Progeny by Mother Groups16. An Hypothesis for the Evolution of Multi-Queen Societies17. Kin-Selection and Multi-Queen Social Systems18. Conclusion
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