THE EUSOCIALITY CONTINUUM

被引:242
作者
SHERMAN, PW
LACEY, EA
REEVE, HK
KELLER, L
机构
[1] Section of Neurobiology and Behavior, Cornell University, Ithaca
[2] Animal Behavior Group, University of California, Davis
[3] Section of Neurobiology and Behavior, Cornell University, Ithaca
[4] Zoological Institute, Bern University, CH-3032 Hinterkappelen, Ethologische Station Hasli
[5] Institute of Zoology and Animal Ecology, University of Lausnne, CH-1015 Lausnne, Batiment de Biologie
关键词
AVIAN EUSOCIALITY; COOPERATIVE BREEDING; EUSOCIALITY; MAMMALIAN EUSOCIALITY; REPRODUCTIVE SKEWS; SOCIAL SYSTEM CONVERGENCE;
D O I
10.1093/beheco/6.1.102
中图分类号
B84 [心理学]; C [社会科学总论]; Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ; 030303 ; 04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Eusocial societies are traditionally characterized by a reproductive division of labor, an overlap of generations, and cooperative care of the breeders' young. Eusociality was once thought to occur only in termites, ants, and some bee and wasp species, but striking evolutionary convergences have recently become apparent between the societies of these insects and those of cooperatively breeding birds and mammals. These parallels have blurred distinctions between cooperative breeding and eusociality, leading to calls for either drastically restricting or expanding wage of these terms. We favor the latter approach. Cooperative breeding and eusociality are not discrete phenomena, but rather form a continuum of fundamentally similar social systems whose main differences lie in the distribution of lifetime reproductive success among group members. Therefore we propose to array vertebrate and invertebrate cooperative breeders along a common axis, representing a standardized measure of reproductive variance, and to drop such (loaded) terms as ''primitive'' and ''advanced'' eusociality. The terminology we propose unites all occurrences of alloparental helping of kin under a single theoretical umbrella (e.g., Hamilton's rule). Thus, cooperatively breeding vertebrates can be regarded as eusocial, just as eusocial inverbrates are cooperative breeders. We believe this integrated approach will foster potentially revealing cross-taxon comparisons, which are essential to understanding social evolution in birds, mammals, and in sects.
引用
收藏
页码:102 / 108
页数:7
相关论文
共 103 条
  • [1] Alexander E.D., Noonan K., Crespi B.J., The evolution of eiuociality, The Biology of the Naked Mole-Rat, pp. 3-44, (1991)
  • [2] Andenion M., The evolution of eusodallty, Annu Rev Ecol Sy»t, 15, pp. 165-189, (1984)
  • [3] Aoki S., Soldiers and altruistic dispersal in aphids, The Biology of Social Insects, pp. 154-158, (1982)
  • [4] Batra S., Nests and social behavior of halictine bees of India (Hymcnoptera: Halictidae), Indian J En-Tomol, 28, pp. 375-393, (1966)
  • [5] Benton T.G., Foster W.A., Altruistic housekeeping in a social aphid, Proc R Soc London B, 247, pp. 199-202, (1992)
  • [6] Bourke A., Worker reproduction in higher eu-sodai Hymcnoptera, Q Rev Biol, 63, pp. 291-311, (1988)
  • [7] Bourke A., The biology of the naked mole-rat, Trends Ecol Evol, 6, pp. 171-172, (1991)
  • [8] Brown J.L., Helping and communal breeding in birds, Princeton, (1987)
  • [9] Burda H., Kawahka M., Evolution of eusodality in the Bathergidae: The case of the giant mole-rats (Cryp-Umys mtchoan), Naturwissenschaften, 80, pp. 235-237, (1993)
  • [10] Carpenter J.M., Phylogenetic relationships and the origin of social behavior in the Vespidae, The Social Biology of Wasps, pp. 7-32, (1991)