Abstract
Annual Review of Entomology
Vol. 52:
127-150
(Volume publication date January 2007)
(doi:10.1146/annurev.ento.51.110104.150950)
First published online as a Review in Advance on July 25, 2006Changing Paradigms in Insect Social Evolution: Insights from Halictine and Allodapine Bees Michael P. Schwarz,1 Miriam H. Richards,2 and Bryan N. Danforth3 1School of Biological Sciences, Flinders University, Adelaide S.A. 5001, Australia; email: Michael.Schwarz@flinders.edu.au 2Department of Biological Sciences, Brock University, St. Catharines, ON L2S 3A1, Canada; email: miriam@brocku.ca 3Department of Entomology, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853; email: bnd1@cornell.edu Abstract Until the 1980s theories of social insect evolution drew strongly on halictine and allodapine bees. However, that early work suffered from a lack of sound phylogenetic inference and detailed information on social behavior in many critical taxa. Recent studies have changed our understanding of these bee groups in profound ways. It has become apparent that forms of social organization, caste determination, and sex allocation are more labile and complex than previously thought, although the terminologies for describing them are still inadequate. Furthermore, the unexpected complexity means that many key parameters in kin selection and reproductive skew models remain unquantified, and addressing this lack of information will be formidable. At the same time, phylogenetic questions have become more tractable, and DNA sequence-based studies have resolved questions that earlier studies could not resolve, radically changing our understanding of the number of origins and losses of sociality in these bees. Acronyms and Definitions Corbiculate apids: bees in the family Apidae with a corbicula, a “basket” of setae for transporting pollen Eusociality: reproductive skew based on generational lines, mostly entailing reproductive mothers and worker-like daughters Preimaginal caste determination: in which the caste that an individual adopts is determined prior to becoming an adult Quasisocial: cooperation between adults in the rearing of brood, but without reproductive skew Semisociality: reproductive skew among same-generation adults that are jointly rearing brood, so that some adults adopt alloparental roles Subsociality: extended parent-offspring contact during offspring development Most recent citing papers (via CrossRef)Decisions, decisions, decisions: the host colony choices of a social parasite Journal of Ethology (2008) Biology of Lasioglossum (L.) majus (Hymenoptera: Halictidae), a largely solitary sweat bee with behavioural adaptations to communality Journal of Ethology (2008) Hasinamelissa
: a new genus of allodapine bee from Madagascar revealed by larval morphology and DNA sequence data Systematic Entomology 33(4):700-710 (2008) Characterization of 14 polymorphic microsatellite loci for the facultatively eusocial sweat bee
Halictus rubicundus
(Hymenoptera, Halictidae) and their variability in related species Molecular Ecology Resources (2008) Genetic and genomic analyses of the division of labour in insect societies Nature Reviews Genetics 9(10):735-748 (2008)
|
|
|
Users who read this review also read:
| P. Kirk Visscher Annual Review of Entomology. Volume 52, Page 255-275, Jan 2007 Abstract
| Full Text
| PDF (191 KB)
| Supplementary material
|
Add to Favorites
| Related | |
| Madeleine Beekman , Benjamin P. Oldroyd Annual Review of Entomology. Volume 53, Page 19-37, Jan 2008 Abstract
| Full Text
| PDF (167 KB)
|
Add to Favorites
| Related | |
| Yves Le Conte , Abraham Hefetz Annual Review of Entomology. Volume 53, Page 523-542, Jan 2008 Abstract
| Full Text
| PDF (160 KB)
|
Add to Favorites
| Related | |
| Nicolas Desneux, Axel Decourtye, Jean-Marie Delpuech Annual Review of Entomology. Volume 52, Page 81-106, Jan 2007 Abstract
| Full Text
| PDF (172 KB)
|
Add to Favorites
| Related | |
|
|