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social insects

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social insects [¦sō·shəl ′in‚seks]
(ecology)
Insect species in which individuals share resources and reproduce cooperatively.

Social insects

Insects that share resources and reproduce cooperatively. The shared resources are shelter, defense, and food (collection or production). After a period of population growth, the insects reproduce in several ways. As social insect groups grow, they evolve more differentiation between members but reintegrate into a more closely organized system known as eusocial. These are the most advanced societies with individual polymorphism, and they contain insects of various ages, sizes, and shapes. All the eusocial insects are included in the orders Isoptera (termites) and Hymenoptera (wasps, bees, and ants). See Insecta, Polymorphism (genetics)

The social insects have evolved in various patterns. In the Hymenoptera, the society is composed of only females; males are produced periodically for their sperm. They usually congregate and attract females, or they visit colonies with virgin females and copulate there. In the Hymenoptera, sex is determined largely by whether the individual has one or two sets of chromosomes. Thus the queen has the power to determine the sex of her offspring: if she lets any of her stored sperm reach the egg, a female is produced; if not, a male results. In the more primitive bees and wasps, social role (caste) is influenced by interaction with like but not necessarily related individuals. The female that can dominate the others assumes the role of queen, even if only temporarily. Domination is achieved by aggression, real or feigned, or merely by a ritual that is followed by some form of salutation by the subordinates. This inhibits the yolk-stimulating glands and prevents the subordinates from contributing to egg production; if it fails to work, the queen tries to destroy any eggs that are laid. Subordinate females take on more and more of the work of the group for as long as the queen is present and well. At first, all the eggs are fertilized and females develop, with the result that virgin females inhabit the nest for the first batches. They are often undernourished, and this, together with their infertility, reduces their urge to leave the nest and start another one. Such workers are said to be produced by maternal manipulation.

Reproductive ants, like termites, engage in a massive nuptial flight, after which the females, replete with sperm, go off to start a new nest. At some stage after the nuptials, the reproductives break off their wings, which have no further use. Workers, however, never have wings because they develop quickly and pass right through the wing-forming stages; their ovaries and genitalia are also reduced. Ant queens can prevent the formation of more queens; as with the honeybee, they do this behaviorally by using pheromones. They also force the workers to feed all larvae the same diet. To this trophogenic caste control is added a blastogenic control; eggs that are laid have a developmental bias toward one caste or another. This is not genetic; bias is affected by the age of the queen and the season: more worker-biased eggs are laid by young queens and by queens in spring. In some ants, workers mature in various sizes. Since they have disproportionately large heads, the biggest workers are used mainly for defense; they also help with jobs that call for strength, like cutting vegetation or cracking nuts.

Social insects make remarkable nests that protect the brood as well as regulate the microclimate. The simplest nests are cavities dug in soil or soft wood, with walls smoothed and plastered with feces that set hard. Chambers at different levels in the soil are frequently connected by vertical shafts so that the inhabitants can choose the chamber with the best microclimate. Termites and ants also make many different types of arboreal nests. These nests are usually made of fecal material, but one species of ant (Oecophylla) binds leaves together with silk produced in the salivary glands of their larvae that the workers hold in their jaws and spin across leaves. A whole group of ants (for example, Pseudomyrmex) inhabit the pith of plants.

Social bees use wax secreted by their cuticular glands and frequently blended with gums from tree exudates for their nest construction. Cells are made cooperatively by a curtain of young bees that scrape wax from their abdomen, chew it with saliva, and mold it into the correct shape; later it is planed and polished. With honeybees the hexagonal comb reaches perfection as a set of back-to-back cells, each sloping slightly upward to prevent honey from running out. The same cells are used repeatedly for brood and for storage; or they may be made a size larger for rearing males. Only the queen cell is pendant, with a circular cross section and an opening below.



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95 Hardcover Contemporary topics in entomology series QL496 So much is known about social insects that in order to keep the size of the volume manageable, the topic had to be narrowly defined, and aspects covered in other recent publications passed over here.
He said: "The hardest to keep track of are the social insects such as our honeybees so we refer to them as one colony.
During this epoch of riotous biodiversity, flowering plants, social insects, butterflies, modern groups of lizards, mammals, and possibly birds, too, all emerged.
 
 
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