Social insect colonies invest in reproduction and growth, but how colonies achieve an adaptive allocation to these life-history characters remains an open question in social insect biology. Attempts to understand how a colony’s investment in reproduction is shaped by the queen and the workers have proved complicated because of the potential for queen–worker conflict over the colony’s investment in males versus females. Honeybees, in which this conflict is expected to be minimal or absent, provide an opportunity to more clearly study how the actions and interactions of individuals influence the colony’s production and regu-lation of males (drones). We examined whether honeybee queens can influence drone regulation by either allowing or preve...
If a honeybee (Apis mellifera) colony loses its queen, worker bees develop their ovaries and produce...
SummaryQueen monogamy is ancestral among bees, ants, and wasps (Order Hymenoptera), and the close re...
In insect societies, intracolonial conflict frequently arises because of conflicting genetic interes...
Social insect colonies invest in reproduction and growth, but how colonies achieve an adaptive alloc...
SummaryAccording to kin selection theory, the colony kin structure of eusocial insects motivates wor...
Honey bee colonies, although highly cooperative, are composed of genetically distinct individuals wi...
Resource inheritance is a major source of conflict in animal societies. However, the assumptions and...
Nepotism is an important potential conflict in animal societies. However, clear evidence of nepotism...
Although social hymenopteran colonies show a high level of cooperation among their members, colony m...
The classic view of insect colonies as harmonic societies has been challenged in the last decades. I...
Although best known for cooperation, insect societies also manifest many potential con¿icts among in...
In a striking example of sex allocation modification, female social insect (hymenopteran) workers so...
Colonies of social insects make numerous group decisions about foraging, nest maintenance, and repro...
In bumblebees, dominance behaviour contributes to the regulation of the reproductive division of lab...
Social insect workers often sacrifice their own reproduction so that they may help relatives to repr...
If a honeybee (Apis mellifera) colony loses its queen, worker bees develop their ovaries and produce...
SummaryQueen monogamy is ancestral among bees, ants, and wasps (Order Hymenoptera), and the close re...
In insect societies, intracolonial conflict frequently arises because of conflicting genetic interes...
Social insect colonies invest in reproduction and growth, but how colonies achieve an adaptive alloc...
SummaryAccording to kin selection theory, the colony kin structure of eusocial insects motivates wor...
Honey bee colonies, although highly cooperative, are composed of genetically distinct individuals wi...
Resource inheritance is a major source of conflict in animal societies. However, the assumptions and...
Nepotism is an important potential conflict in animal societies. However, clear evidence of nepotism...
Although social hymenopteran colonies show a high level of cooperation among their members, colony m...
The classic view of insect colonies as harmonic societies has been challenged in the last decades. I...
Although best known for cooperation, insect societies also manifest many potential con¿icts among in...
In a striking example of sex allocation modification, female social insect (hymenopteran) workers so...
Colonies of social insects make numerous group decisions about foraging, nest maintenance, and repro...
In bumblebees, dominance behaviour contributes to the regulation of the reproductive division of lab...
Social insect workers often sacrifice their own reproduction so that they may help relatives to repr...
If a honeybee (Apis mellifera) colony loses its queen, worker bees develop their ovaries and produce...
SummaryQueen monogamy is ancestral among bees, ants, and wasps (Order Hymenoptera), and the close re...
In insect societies, intracolonial conflict frequently arises because of conflicting genetic interes...