Authors
Francis LW Ratnieks, Kevin R Foster, Tom Wenseleers
Publication date
2006/1/7
Journal
Annual Review of Entomology
Volume
51
Pages
581-608
Publisher
Annual Reviews
Description
▪ Abstract
Although best known for cooperation, insect societies also manifest many potential conflicts among individuals. These conflicts involve both direct reproduction by individuals and manipulation of the reproduction of colony members. Here we review five major areas of reproductive conflict in insect societies: (a) sex allocation, (b) queen rearing, (c) male rearing, (d) queen-worker caste fate, and (e) breeding conflicts among totipotent adults. For each area we discuss the basis for conflict (potential conflict), whether conflict is expressed (actual conflict), whose interests prevail (conflict outcome), and the factors that reduce colony-level costs of conflict (conflict resolution), such as factors that cause workers to work rather than to lay eggs. Reproductive conflicts are widespread, sometimes having dramatic effects on the colony. However, three key factors (kinship, coercion, and constraint) typically combine to limit …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
FLW Ratnieks, KR Foster, T Wenseleers - Annual review of entomology, 2006