Behaviour and Social Evolution of Wasps: The Communal Aggregation Hypothesis

Paperback Published on: 04/02/1993
Price: £22.49
UK delivery included
In stock
Print on demand - Usually dispatched within 7-10 days
Make and edit your lists in your account
wordery
has a fantastic rating on
In stock
Print on demand - Usually dispatched within 7-10 days
wordery
has a fantastic rating on

Synopsis

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 defence 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 behaviour, this book beautifully illustrates the ability to combine wide-ranging data with thoughtful questions - the author's trademark.

Publisher information

  • Publisher: OUP OXFORD
  • ISBN: 9780198540465
  • Number of pages: 168
  • Dimensions: 233 x 155 x 11 mm
  • Weight: 296g
  • Languages: English