Literature DB >> 18979593

Life history and development--a framework for understanding developmental plasticity in lower termites.

Judith Korb1, Klaus Hartfelder.   

Abstract

Termites (Isoptera) are the phylogenetically oldest social insects, but in scientific research they have always stood in the shadow of the social Hymenoptera. Both groups of social insects evolved complex societies independently and hence, their different ancestry provided them with different life-history preadaptations for social evolution. Termites, the 'social cockroaches', have a hemimetabolous mode of development and both sexes are diploid, while the social Hymenoptera belong to the holometabolous insects and have a haplodiploid mode of sex determination. Despite this apparent disparity it is interesting to ask whether termites and social Hymenoptera share common principles in their individual and social ontogenies and how these are related to the evolution of their respective social life histories. Such a comparison has, however, been much hampered by the developmental complexity of the termite caste system, as well as by an idiosyncratic terminology, which makes it difficult for non-termitologists to access the literature. Here, we provide a conceptual guide to termite terminology based on the highly flexible caste system of the "lower termites". We summarise what is known about ultimate causes and underlying proximate mechanisms in the evolution and maintenance of termite sociality, and we try to embed the results and their discussion into general evolutionary theory and developmental biology. Finally, we speculate about fundamental factors that might have facilitated the unique evolution of complex societies in a diploid hemimetabolous insect taxon. This review also aims at a better integration of termites into general discussions on evolutionary and developmental biology, and it shows that the ecology of termites and their astounding phenotypic plasticity have a large yet still little explored potential to provide insights into elementary evo-devo questions.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18979593     DOI: 10.1111/j.1469-185x.2008.00044.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc        ISSN: 0006-3231


  43 in total

1.  Brood care and social evolution in termites.

Authors:  Judith Korb; Michael Buschmann; Saskia Schafberg; Jürgen Liebig; Anne-Geneviève Bagnères
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2012-03-07       Impact factor: 5.349

2.  Expansion of presoldier cuticle contributes to head elongation during soldier differentiation in termites.

Authors:  Yasuhiro Sugime; Kota Ogawa; Dai Watanabe; Hiroyuki Shimoji; Shigeyuki Koshikawa; Toru Miura
Journal:  Naturwissenschaften       Date:  2015-11-16

3.  Compound eye formation in the termite Incisitermes minor (Isoptera: Kalotermitidae).

Authors:  Taylor C Rose; Emily F Ediger; Joy Lehman-Schletewitz; Nathan W McClane; Kristen C Schweigert; Saif Alzweideh; Lauren Wadsworth; Claudia Husseneder; Joshua W Morris; Jurgen Ziesmann
Journal:  Dev Genes Evol       Date:  2015-07-09       Impact factor: 0.900

Review 4.  Beyond promiscuity: mate-choice commitments in social breeding.

Authors:  Jacobus J Boomsma
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2013-01-21       Impact factor: 6.237

5.  Reproductive queue without overt conflict in the primitively eusocial wasp Ropalidia marginata.

Authors:  Alok Bang; Raghavendra Gadagkar
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2012-08-20       Impact factor: 11.205

6.  Drywood Pest Termite Cryptotermes brevis (Blattaria: Isoptera: Kalotermitidae): a Detailed Morphological Study of Pseudergates.

Authors:  C S Cesar; D Giacometti; A M Costa-Leonardo; F E Casarin
Journal:  Neotrop Entomol       Date:  2019-06-13       Impact factor: 1.434

7.  Sex-specific inhibition and stimulation of worker-reproductive transition in a termite.

Authors:  Qian Sun; Kenneth F Haynes; Jordan D Hampton; Xuguo Zhou
Journal:  Naturwissenschaften       Date:  2017-09-06

8.  Scent of a queen-cuticular hydrocarbons specific for female reproductives in lower termites.

Authors:  Tobias Weil; Katharina Hoffmann; Johannes Kroiss; Erhard Strohm; Judith Korb
Journal:  Naturwissenschaften       Date:  2008-11-26

Review 9.  Chemical Fertility Signaling in Termites: Idiosyncrasies and Commonalities in Comparison with Ants.

Authors:  Judith Korb
Journal:  J Chem Ecol       Date:  2018-04-04       Impact factor: 2.626

10.  Cooperative policing behaviour regulates reproductive division of labour in a termite.

Authors:  Qian Sun; Jordan D Hampton; Austin Merchant; Kenneth F Haynes; Xuguo Zhou
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2020-06-10       Impact factor: 5.349

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