Social life results in social stress protection: a novel concept to explain individual life‐history patterns in social insects

Author:

Walton Alexander1,Herman Jacob J.1,Rueppell Olav1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological Sciences University of Alberta CW 405, Biological Sciences Building Edmonton Alberta Canada

Abstract

ABSTRACTResistance to and avoidance of stress slow aging and confer increased longevity in numerous organisms. Honey bees and other superorganismal social insects have two main advantages over solitary species to avoid or resist stress: individuals can directly help each other by resource or information transfer, and they can cooperatively control their environment. These benefits have been recognised in the context of pathogen and parasite stress as the concept of social immunity, which has been extensively studied. However, we argue that social immunity is only a special case of a general concept that we define here as social stress protection to include group‐level defences against all biotic and abiotic stressors. We reason that social stress protection may have allowed the evolution of reduced individual‐level defences and individual life‐history optimization, including the exceptional aging plasticity of many social insects. We describe major categories of stress and how a colonial lifestyle may protect social insects, particularly against temporary peaks of extreme stress. We use the honey bee (Apis mellifera L.) to illustrate how patterns of life expectancy may be explained by social stress protection and how modern beekeeping practices can disrupt social stress protection. We conclude that the broad concept of social stress protection requires rigorous empirical testing because it may have implications for our general understanding of social evolution and specifically for improving honey bee health.

Funder

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Life Sciences Division, Army Research Office

Publisher

Wiley

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