Behavioural Ecology of Ants - J.H. Sudd - Books - Kluwer Academic Publishers Group - 9780216922464 - July 31, 1987
In case cover and title do not match, the title is correct

Behavioural Ecology of Ants 1987 edition

J.H. Sudd

Price
S$ 162

Ordered from remote warehouse

Expected delivery Nov 29 - Dec 12
Add to your iMusic wish list

Behavioural Ecology of Ants 1987 edition

This book is concerned with two problems: how eusociality, in which one individual forgoes reproduction to enhance the reproduction of a nestmate, could evolve under natural selection, and why it is found only in some insects-termites, ants and some bees and wasps. Although eusociality is apparently confined to insects, it has evolved a number of times in a single order of insects, the Hymenoptera. W. Hamilton's hypothesis, that the unusual haplodiploid mechanism of sex determination in the Hymenoptera singled this order out, still seems to have great explanatory power in the study of social ants. We believe that the direction, indeed confinement, of social altruism to close kin is the mainspring of social life in an ant colony, and the alternative explanatory schemes of, for example, parental manipu­ lation, should rightly be seen to operate within a system based on the selective support of kin. To control the flow of resources within their colony all its members resort to manipulations of their nestmates: parental manipulation of offspring is only one facet of a complex web of manipul­ ation, exploitation and competition for resources within the colony. The political intrigues extend outside the bounds of the colony, to insects and plants which have mutualistic relations with ants. In eusociality some individuals (sterile workers) do not pass their genes to a new generation directly. Instead, they tend the offspring of a close relation (in the simplest case their mother).


206 pages, biography

Media Books     Paperback Book   (Book with soft cover and glued back)
Released July 31, 1987
ISBN13 9780216922464
Publishers Kluwer Academic Publishers Group
Pages 206
Dimensions 216 × 279 × 12 mm   ·   285 g
Language English