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

DC ElementWertSprache
dc.contributor.authorKorb, Judith
dc.contributor.authorHartfelder, Klaus
dc.date.accessioned2021-12-23T16:15:27Z-
dc.date.available2021-12-23T16:15:27Z-
dc.date.issued2008
dc.identifier.issn14647931
dc.identifier.urihttps://osnascholar.ub.uni-osnabrueck.de/handle/unios/11434-
dc.description.abstractTermites (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.
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherWILEY
dc.relation.ispartofBIOLOGICAL REVIEWS
dc.subjectBiology
dc.subjectcaste
dc.subjectCRYPTOTERMES-SECUNDUS
dc.subjectdevelopmental plasticity
dc.subjectFORMOSAN SUBTERRANEAN TERMITE
dc.subjectGENE-EXPRESSION
dc.subjectHODOTERMOPSIS-JAPONICA ISOPTERA
dc.subjectHONEY-BEE
dc.subjectjuvenile hormone
dc.subjectJUVENILE-HORMONE-III
dc.subjectLABORATORY EXPERIMENTAL GROUPS
dc.subjectLife Sciences & Biomedicine - Other Topics
dc.subjectmetamorphosis
dc.subjectmoult
dc.subjectneotenic
dc.subjectpolyphenism
dc.subjectpseudergate
dc.subjectRETICULITERMES-FLAVIPES
dc.subjectsocial insect
dc.subjectSOLDIER-CASTE DIFFERENTIATION
dc.subjectwing development
dc.subjectZOOTERMOPSIS-NEVADENSIS
dc.titleLife history and development - a framework for understanding developmental plasticity in lower termites
dc.typereview
dc.identifier.doi10.1111/j.1469-185X.2008.00044.x
dc.identifier.isiISI:000257796900004
dc.description.volume83
dc.description.issue3
dc.description.startpage295
dc.description.endpage313
dc.contributor.orcid0000-0001-7981-8427
dc.contributor.orcid0000-0001-7981-8427
dc.contributor.researcheridL-2300-2019
dc.contributor.researcheridA-4293-2009
dc.identifier.eissn1469185X
dc.publisher.place111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
dcterms.isPartOf.abbreviationBiol. Rev.
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