Only full-sibling families evolved eusociality.


Autoria(s): Boomsma J.J.; Beekman M.; Cornwallis C.K.; Griffin A.S.; Holman L.; Hughes W.O.; Keller L.; Oldroyd B.P.; Ratnieks F.L.
Data(s)

2011

Resumo

Arising from M. A. Nowak, C. E. Tarnita & E. O. Wilson 466, 1057-1062 (2010); Nowak et al. reply. The paper by Nowak et al. has the evolution of eusociality as its title, but it is mostly about something else. It argues against inclusive fitness theory and offers an alternative modelling approach that is claimed to be more fundamental and general, but which, we believe, has no practical biological meaning for the evolution of eusociality. Nowak et al. overlook the robust empirical observation that eusociality has only arisen in clades where mothers are associated with their full-sibling offspring; that is, in families where the average relatedness of offspring to siblings is as high as to their own offspring, independent of population structure or ploidy. We believe that this omission makes the paper largely irrelevant for understanding the evolution of eusociality.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_9E778FDDEAC3

isbn:1476-4687 (Electronic)

pmid:21430722

doi:10.1038/nature09832

isiid:000288702200002

Idioma(s)

en

Fonte

Nature, vol. 471, no. 7339, pp. E4-E5; author reply E9-10

Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article