H Zeng - Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 2023 - Springer
An ant colony is the epitome of social organization where up to millions of individuals cooperate to survive, compete, and reproduce as a single superorganism, Female members …
Social insects are known for their reproductive division of labor between queens and workers, whereby queens lay the majority of the colony's eggs, and workers engage mostly …
Queen pheromones, which signal the presence of a fertile queen and induce workers to remain sterile, play a key role in regulating reproductive division of labour in insect societies …
In several highly eusocial insect species with morphologically distinct castes, queen- characteristic cuticular hydrocarbons (CHCs) have been shown to act as queen signals that …
S Adejumo, T Kikuchi, K Tsuji… - PLOS Computational …, 2023 - journals.plos.org
Social insects demonstrate adaptive behaviour for a given colony size. Remarkably, most species do this even without visual information in a dark environment. However, how they …
The evolutionary origin of queen pheromones (QPs), which regulate reproductive division of labor in insect societies, has been explained by two evolutionary scenarios: the sender …
CF Funaro, C Schal, EL Vargo - Plos one, 2019 - journals.plos.org
Royal recognition is a central feature of insect societies, allowing them to maintain the reproductive division of labor and regulate colony demography. Queen recognition has …
P Lhomme, HM Hines - Journal of chemical ecology, 2018 - Springer
In eusocial insects, the high cost of altruistic cooperation between colony members has favoured the evolution of cheaters that exploit social services of other species. In the most …
Social insect colonies are organized by a reproductive division of labor, in which non- reproductive workers cooperate to rear the offspring of the queen. Queen pheromones …