Kin Selection versus Sexual Selection: Why the Ends Do Not Meet
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] J. Strassmann. The rarity of multiple mating by females in the social Hymenoptera , 2001, Insectes Sociaux.
[2] L. Keller,et al. Partitioning of Reproduction in Mother-Daughter Versus Sibling Associations: A Test of Optimal Skew Theory , 1995, The American Naturalist.
[3] J. Emmett Duffy,et al. Evolutionary ecology of social and sexual systems : crustaceans as model organisms , 2007 .
[4] A. Griffin,et al. Evolutionary Explanations for Cooperation , 2007, Current Biology.
[5] N. Koeniger,et al. Drone competition at drone congregation areas in four Apis species , 2005 .
[6] R. Trivers,et al. Haplodiploidy and the Evolution of the Social Insects , 2008 .
[7] C. G. Faulkes,et al. Family values: group dynamics and social control of reproduction in African mole-rats. , 2001, Trends in ecology & evolution.
[8] C. Nalepa,et al. EVOLUTION OF MONOGAMY IN TERMITES , 1991 .
[9] W. Hamilton. The genetical evolution of social behaviour. II. , 1964, Journal of theoretical biology.
[10] T. Clutton‐Brock,et al. A genetic analysis of breeding success in the cooperative meerkat (Suricata suricatta) , 2003 .
[11] T. Birkhead,et al. Evolutionary Ecology of the Prezygotic Stage , 2004, Science.
[12] B. Campbell. Forces and Strategies in Evolution. (Book Reviews: Sexual Selection and the Descent of Man, 1871-1971) , 1972 .
[13] I. Owens,et al. Extra pair paternity in birds: a review of interspecific variation and adaptive function , 2002, Molecular ecology.
[14] D. Queller. Male-Female Conflict and Parent-Offspring Conflict , 1994, The American Naturalist.
[15] J. Heinze,et al. Stress Grows Wings Environmental Induction of Winged Dispersal Males in Cardiocondyla Ants , 2003, Current Biology.
[16] D. Queller. The evolution of eusociality: Reproductive head starts of workers. , 1989, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[17] E. Adams,et al. The origins and relatedness of multiple reproductives in colonies of the termite Nasutitermes corniger , 1997, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences.
[18] T. E. Moore,et al. Sexual Selection and Reproductive Competition in Insects , 1979 .
[19] E. Wilson. The Insect Societies , 1974 .
[20] M. Taborsky,et al. OUTBREEDING DEPRESSION, BUT NO INBREEDING DEPRESSION IN HAPLODIPLOID AMBROSIA BEETLES WITH REGULAR SIBLING MATING , 2005, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[21] J. Shellman-Reeve. The Evolution of Social Behavior in Insects and Arachnids: The spectrum of eusociality in termites , 1997 .
[22] A. Mikheyev. Evidence for mating plugs in the fire ant Solenopsis invicta , 2003, Insectes Sociaux.
[23] S. H. Bartz,et al. Evolution of eusociality in termites. , 1979, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[24] Bernard J. Crespi,et al. The definition of eusociality , 1995 .
[25] J. Boomsma,et al. Do army ant queens re-mate later in life? , 2007, Insectes Sociaux.
[26] R. Meldola. Sexual Selection , 1871, Nature.
[27] A. Cockburn. Cooperative breeding in oscine passerines: does sociality inhibit speciation? , 2003, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences.
[28] D.,et al. THE EVOLUTION OF SOCIAL BEHAVIOR , 2002 .
[29] W. Foster,et al. The Evolution of Social Behavior in Insects and Arachnids: The evolution of sociality in aphids: a clone's-eye view , 1997 .
[30] W. Hamilton. WINGLESS AND FIGHTING MALES IN FIG WASPS AND OTHER INSECTS , 1979 .
[31] P. Pye-Smith. The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex , 1871, Nature.
[32] Berrigan. Evolution in health and disease , 1999, Public health.
[33] E. Charnov,et al. ON IRREVERSIBLE EVOLUTION , 1985, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[34] R. Trivers. Parental investment and sexual selection , 1972 .
[35] J. Emmett Duffy. The ecology and evolution of eusociality in sponge-dwelling shrimp , 2002 .
[36] L. Keller,et al. Tests of reproductive-skew models in social insects. , 2001, Annual review of entomology.
[37] J. Heinze,et al. Evolution of male morphology in the ant genus Cardiocondyla. , 2005, Molecular phylogenetics and evolution.
[38] T. Clutton‐Brock,et al. Punishment in animal societies , 1995, Nature.
[39] J. Shellman-Reeve. Courting strategies and conflicts in a monogamous, biparental termite , 1999, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences.
[40] J. Heinze,et al. Genetic structure and reproductive strategy of the ant Cardiocondyla elegans: strictly monogynous nests invaded by unrelated sexuals , 2006, Molecular ecology.
[41] S. Creel,et al. Subordinate reproduction in dwarf mongooses , 1994, Animal Behaviour.
[42] C. Faulkes,et al. African Mole-Rats: Ecology and Eusociality , 2000 .
[43] J. Boomsma,et al. The evolution of male traits in social insects. , 2005, Annual review of entomology.
[44] R. Trivers,et al. Genes in Conflict , 2006 .
[45] R. Dawkins,et al. The extended phenotype : the gene as the unit of selection , 1982 .
[46] L. Keller. Social evolution in ants , 1996 .
[47] Y. Roisin. Philopatric reproduction, a prime mover in the evolution of termite sociality? , 1999, Insectes Sociaux.
[48] D. Hosken,et al. Sexual conflict , 2005, Current Biology.
[49] Robert W. Matthews,et al. The social biology of wasps. , 1991 .
[50] Paul H. Harvey,et al. The Ant and the Peacock , 1992 .
[51] D. Barash,et al. The myth of monogamy: Fidelity and infidelity in animals and people. , 2001 .
[52] B. Crespi. "Comparative Evolutionary Ecology of Social and Sexual systems: Water-breathing Insects Come of Age" , 2007 .
[53] M. Wade,et al. THE EVOLUTION OF INSECT MATING SYSTEMS. , 1984, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[54] G. Parker,et al. SPERM COMPETITION AND ITS EVOLUTIONARY CONSEQUENCES IN THE INSECTS , 1970 .
[55] E. Wilson. Sociobiology: The New Synthesis , 1976 .
[56] P. Schmid-Hempel,et al. A nonspecific fatty acid within the bumblebee mating plug prevents females from remating , 2001, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[57] W. Hamilton,et al. Altruism and Related Phenomena, Mainly in Social Insects , 1972 .
[58] M. Taborsky,et al. Delayed dispersal as a potential route to cooperative breeding in ambrosia beetles , 2007, Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology.
[59] T. Wenseleers,et al. Enforced altruism in insect societies , 2006, Nature.
[60] J. Krebs,et al. Behavioural Ecology: An Evolutionary Approach , 1978 .
[61] T. Clutton‐Brock,et al. Paternity loss in contrasting mammalian societies , 2006, Biology Letters.
[62] A. Griffin,et al. Kin Discrimination and the Benefit of Helping in Cooperatively Breeding Vertebrates , 2003, Science.
[63] R. Crozier,et al. Evolution of social insect colonies , 1996 .
[64] P. Sherman,et al. The Biology of the Naked Mole-Rat , 2017 .
[65] S. Emlen,et al. Parent–offspring conflict , 1992, Nature.
[66] Bourke. Colony size, social complexity and reproductive conflict in social insects , 1999 .
[67] A. Griffin,et al. Testing Hamilton's rule with competition between relatives , 2001, Nature.
[68] F. Ratnieks,et al. Paternity in eusocial Hymenoptera , 1996 .
[69] L. Keller,et al. Social life: the paradox of multiple-queen colonies. , 1995, Trends in ecology & evolution.
[70] B. Baer. Sexual selection in Apis bees , 2005 .
[71] M. Schwarz,et al. Changing paradigms in insect social evolution: insights from halictine and allodapine bees. , 2007, Annual review of entomology.
[72] S. Braude. Dispersal and new colony formation in wild naked mole-rats: evidence against inbreeding as the system of mating , 2000 .
[73] K. Raffa,et al. The Evolution of Social Behavior in Insects and Arachnids: Interactions among males, females and offspring in bark and ambrosia beetles: the significance of living in tunnels for the evolution of social behavior , 1997 .
[74] D. Wheeler,et al. Multiple mating in the ant Acromyrmex versicolor: a case of female control , 1996, Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology.
[75] J. Heinze,et al. Fighting for a harem of queens: physiology of reproduction in Cardiocondyla male ants. , 1993, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[76] R. Lewontin. ‘The Selfish Gene’ , 1977, Nature.
[77] J. Dickinson,et al. Ecology and evolution of cooperative breeding in birds , 2004 .
[78] B. Crespi,et al. The Evolution of Social Behavior in Insects and Arachnids: Ecology and evolution of social behavior among Australian gall thrips and their allies , 1997 .
[79] R. Trivers,et al. Haploidploidy and the evolution of the social insect. , 1976, Science.
[80] K. Foster,et al. Kin selection is the key to altruism. , 2006, Trends in ecology & evolution.
[81] W. Hamilton. The genetical evolution of social behaviour. I. , 1964, Journal of theoretical biology.
[82] R. Lande. Models of speciation by sexual selection on polygenic traits. , 1981, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[83] J. Strassmann,et al. Insect societies as divided organisms: The complexities of purpose and cross-purpose , 2007, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[84] Leticia Avilés,et al. The Evolution of Social Behavior in Insects and Arachnids: Causes and consequences of cooperation and permanent-sociality in spiders , 1997 .
[85] B. Cole,et al. Polyandry and fitness in the western harvester ant, Pogonomyrmex occidentalis , 2004, Molecular ecology.
[86] E. Wilson,et al. Eusociality: origin and consequences. , 2005, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[87] K. Foster,et al. Paternity, reproduction and conflict in vespine wasps: a model system for testing kin selection predictions , 2001, Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology.
[88] Deby L. Cassill,et al. The Social Gene , 2005 .
[89] E. Wilson,et al. The number of queens: An important trait in ant evolution , 2004, Naturwissenschaften.
[90] T. Chapman,et al. Response to Eberhard and Cordero, and Córdoba-Aguilar and Contreras-Garduño: sexual conflict and female choice , 2003 .
[91] W. J. Bell,et al. The Evolution of Social Behavior in Insects and Arachnids: Postovulation parental investment and parental care in cockroaches , 1997 .
[92] R. Craig. PARENTAL MANIPULATION, KIN SELECTION, AND THE EVOLUTION OF ALTRUISM , 1979, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[93] H. Helanterä,et al. Pedigree relatedness, not greenbeard genes, explains eusociality , 2007 .
[94] W. Tschinkel,et al. Efficiency of Sperm Use in Queens of the Fire Ant, Solenopsis invicta (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) , 1988 .
[95] A. Griffin,et al. Social semantics : altruism , cooperation , mutualism , strong reciprocity and group selection , 2007 .
[96] David Sloan Wilson,et al. Weak Altruism, Strong Group Selection , 1990 .
[97] J. Boomsma,et al. Male reproductive investment and queen mating-frequency in fungus-growing ants , 2004 .
[98] J. S. Pedersen,et al. The Evolution of Social Insect Mating Systems , 2009, Organization of Insect Societies.
[99] P. Eggleton,et al. Death of an order: a comprehensive molecular phylogenetic study confirms that termites are eusocial cockroaches , 2007, Biology Letters.
[100] Randy Thornhill,et al. The Evolution of Insect Mating Systems , 1983 .
[101] R. Ford Denison,et al. Darwinian Agriculture: When Can Humans Find Solutions Beyond The Reach of Natural Selection? , 2003, The Quarterly Review of Biology.
[102] E. Charnov,et al. Some conceptual issues in the origin of eusociality , 1986, Heredity.