Affiliation:
1. Section of Neurobiology and Behavior, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853-2702;
2. Institute of Ecology, University of Lausanne, Bâtiment de Biologie, Lausanne, 1015 Switzerland;
Abstract
▪ Abstract Reproductive-skew theory can be broadly divided into transactional models, in which reproduction is shared among group members in return for some fitness benefit, and tug-of-war models, in which reproductive sharing arises solely from an inability of each group member to fully control the others. For small-colony social insects in which complete reproductive control by a single individual is plausible, transactional-concession models account, better than any other existing model, for observed relationships between each of the dependent variables of skew, changes in reproductive partitioning over time, group size, and within-group aggression, and each of the predictor variables of genetic relatedness, ecological constraints on solitary breeding, and benefits of group living. An extension of transactional-concession models via the “workers-as-a-collective-dominant” model potentially offers new insights into some of the most striking reproductive patterns in large-colony eusocial Hymenopteran species, from the loss of worker capacity to produce female offspring to patterns of skew and aggression in polygynous societies.
Subject
Insect Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
208 articles.
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