Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2623821882> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 89 of
89
with 100 items per page.
- W2623821882 endingPage "6426" @default.
- W2623821882 startingPage "6424" @default.
- W2623821882 abstract "A key question in evolutionary biology is to explain the causes and consequences of the so-called “major transitions in evolution,” which resulted in the progressive evolution of cells, organisms, and animal societies (1⇓–3). Several studies, for example, have now aimed to determine which suite of adaptive changes occurred following the evolution of sociality in insects (4). In this context, a long-standing hypothesis is that the evolution of the spectacular sociality seen in insects, such as ants, bees, or wasps, should have gone hand in hand with the evolution of more complex chemical communication systems, to allow them to coordinate their complex social behavior (5). Indeed, whereas solitary insects are known to use pheromone signals mainly in the context of mate attraction and species-recognition, social insects use chemical signals in a wide variety of contexts: to communicate their caste or reproductive status, recognize nestmates from invaders, mark the way to food sources, or alarm nestmates about imminent danger (5). Well-controlled studies of the change in investment in chemical communication systems in highly eusocial insects, such as ants, termites, or Corbiculate bees, however, have proven hard to conduct, because eusociality in these taxa evolved long ago in the Cretaceous (6) and closely related solitary species are no longer around (Fig. 1). In PNAS, Wittwer et al. (7) now provide an elegant solution to this problem. By studying Halictinae sweat bees—a group of primitively eusocial insects that evolved sociality more recently and on several occasions reverted back to a solitary lifestyle (8) (Fig. 1)—they succeed in making an accurate comparison of the investment in chemosensory systems made by social and derived, closely related, nonsocial species.Fig. 1. Cladogram showing the independent origins and secondary losses of sociality in the Hymenoptera (after refs. 6 and 20⇓⇓⇓–24). For clarity, … [↵][1]1To whom correspondence should be addressed. Email: tom.wenseleers{at}kuleuven.be. [1]: #xref-corresp-1-1" @default.
- W2623821882 created "2017-06-15" @default.
- W2623821882 creator A5031053508 @default.
- W2623821882 creator A5037697207 @default.
- W2623821882 date "2017-06-09" @default.
- W2623821882 modified "2023-10-17" @default.
- W2623821882 title "Sensory and cognitive adaptations to social living in insect societies" @default.
- W2623821882 cites W1592395964 @default.
- W2623821882 cites W1984597154 @default.
- W2623821882 cites W2003384061 @default.
- W2623821882 cites W2018224182 @default.
- W2623821882 cites W2021498612 @default.
- W2623821882 cites W2098593285 @default.
- W2623821882 cites W2100176256 @default.
- W2623821882 cites W2111564330 @default.
- W2623821882 cites W2112031142 @default.
- W2623821882 cites W2124022182 @default.
- W2623821882 cites W2137357771 @default.
- W2623821882 cites W2146736550 @default.
- W2623821882 cites W2154835355 @default.
- W2623821882 cites W2166304971 @default.
- W2623821882 cites W2175066268 @default.
- W2623821882 cites W2265139202 @default.
- W2623821882 cites W2276518862 @default.
- W2623821882 cites W2295791213 @default.
- W2623821882 cites W2358712384 @default.
- W2623821882 cites W2602840959 @default.
- W2623821882 cites W2604311607 @default.
- W2623821882 cites W2617813023 @default.
- W2623821882 cites W3149902754 @default.
- W2623821882 doi "https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1707141114" @default.
- W2623821882 hasPubMedCentralId "https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/5488963" @default.
- W2623821882 hasPubMedId "https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28600351" @default.
- W2623821882 hasPublicationYear "2017" @default.
- W2623821882 type Work @default.
- W2623821882 sameAs 2623821882 @default.
- W2623821882 citedByCount "15" @default.
- W2623821882 countsByYear W26238218822017 @default.
- W2623821882 countsByYear W26238218822018 @default.
- W2623821882 countsByYear W26238218822019 @default.
- W2623821882 countsByYear W26238218822020 @default.
- W2623821882 countsByYear W26238218822021 @default.
- W2623821882 countsByYear W26238218822023 @default.
- W2623821882 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W2623821882 hasAuthorship W2623821882A5031053508 @default.
- W2623821882 hasAuthorship W2623821882A5037697207 @default.
- W2623821882 hasBestOaLocation W26238218821 @default.
- W2623821882 hasConcept C139807058 @default.
- W2623821882 hasConcept C15744967 @default.
- W2623821882 hasConcept C169760540 @default.
- W2623821882 hasConcept C169900460 @default.
- W2623821882 hasConcept C18903297 @default.
- W2623821882 hasConcept C2777612826 @default.
- W2623821882 hasConcept C46312422 @default.
- W2623821882 hasConcept C86803240 @default.
- W2623821882 hasConceptScore W2623821882C139807058 @default.
- W2623821882 hasConceptScore W2623821882C15744967 @default.
- W2623821882 hasConceptScore W2623821882C169760540 @default.
- W2623821882 hasConceptScore W2623821882C169900460 @default.
- W2623821882 hasConceptScore W2623821882C18903297 @default.
- W2623821882 hasConceptScore W2623821882C2777612826 @default.
- W2623821882 hasConceptScore W2623821882C46312422 @default.
- W2623821882 hasConceptScore W2623821882C86803240 @default.
- W2623821882 hasFunder F4320334840 @default.
- W2623821882 hasIssue "25" @default.
- W2623821882 hasLocation W26238218821 @default.
- W2623821882 hasLocation W26238218822 @default.
- W2623821882 hasLocation W26238218823 @default.
- W2623821882 hasLocation W26238218824 @default.
- W2623821882 hasLocation W26238218825 @default.
- W2623821882 hasOpenAccess W2623821882 @default.
- W2623821882 hasPrimaryLocation W26238218821 @default.
- W2623821882 hasRelatedWork W1930362757 @default.
- W2623821882 hasRelatedWork W1998392867 @default.
- W2623821882 hasRelatedWork W2093140091 @default.
- W2623821882 hasRelatedWork W2313499821 @default.
- W2623821882 hasRelatedWork W2328888782 @default.
- W2623821882 hasRelatedWork W2616738127 @default.
- W2623821882 hasRelatedWork W3086841127 @default.
- W2623821882 hasRelatedWork W4232946919 @default.
- W2623821882 hasRelatedWork W4254499829 @default.
- W2623821882 hasRelatedWork W4310861275 @default.
- W2623821882 hasVolume "114" @default.
- W2623821882 isParatext "false" @default.
- W2623821882 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W2623821882 magId "2623821882" @default.
- W2623821882 workType "article" @default.