Korb Judith, Hartfelder Klaus
Biologie I, Universität Regensburg D-93040 Regensburg, Germany.
Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 2008 Aug;83(3):295-313. doi: 10.1111/j.1469-185x.2008.00044.x.
Termites (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.
白蚁(等翅目)是系统发育上最古老的社会性昆虫,但在科学研究中,它们一直处于社会性膜翅目的阴影之下。这两类社会性昆虫独立进化出了复杂的社会群体,因此,它们不同的祖先为其社会进化提供了不同的生活史预适应特征。白蚁,即“社会性蟑螂”,具有渐变态的发育模式,两性均为二倍体,而社会性膜翅目昆虫属于全变态昆虫,具有单倍体二倍体性别决定模式。尽管存在这种明显差异,但探究白蚁和社会性膜翅目昆虫在个体发育和社会发育过程中是否有共同原则以及这些原则如何与它们各自社会生活史的进化相关,是很有意思的。然而,这样的比较受到了白蚁品级系统发育复杂性以及独特术语的极大阻碍,这使得非白蚁学家难以查阅相关文献。在此,我们基于“低等白蚁”高度灵活的品级系统,提供一份白蚁术语的概念指南。我们总结了关于白蚁社会性进化和维持的最终原因及潜在近因机制的已知信息,并尝试将研究结果及其讨论融入一般进化理论和发育生物学中。最后,我们推测了可能促进二倍体渐变态昆虫类群中复杂社会独特进化的基本因素。这篇综述还旨在更好地将白蚁纳入关于进化生物学和发育生物学的一般讨论中,并且表明白蚁的生态学及其惊人的表型可塑性在为基本的进化发育问题提供见解方面具有巨大但仍未充分探索的潜力。