Group-living behavior is taxonomically widespread but rare in spiders. The conventional view is that the main pathways to group-living in spiders are either sub-social, where extended maternal care leads to prolonged sibling association; or communal living, where individuals aggregate to exploit a common resource. Female egg-sac guarding behavior occurs throughout kleptoparasitic spiders in the subfamily Argyrodinae (Theridiidae), while individuals in group-living species cohabit in the resource rich webs of their host spiders. These attributes fit both sub-social and communal routes to group-living, which offers new insights to study the early stages of social evolution. We investigated whether members of kleptoparasitic groups in natural ...
Social spiders most likely evolved from subsocial-like ancestors, species in which siblings remain t...
The evolution of cooperation requires benefits of group living to exceed costs. Hence, some componen...
Cooperation and group living often evolves through kin selection. However, associations between unre...
Group-living behavior is taxonomically widespread but rare in spiders. The conventional view is that...
Group-living behavior is taxonomically widespread but rare in spiders. The conventional view is that...
ABSTRACT. In sub-social spiders, restricted dispersal of young (i.e., natal philopatry) and the pote...
A major goal of evolutionary research is to elucidate the processes involved in the evolution of gro...
Social cooperative spiders from diverse taxonomic families share life-history and demographic traits...
Sociality – cooperative group living – is ubiquitous in the natural world, yet our understanding of ...
Across several animal taxa, the evolution of sociality involves a suite of characteristics, a 'socia...
The evolution of group living is regarded as a major evolutionary transition and is commonly met wit...
Many models have been advanced to suggest how different expressions of sociality have evolved and ar...
Animal social systems come in a wide range of forms characterized by different types of group-living...
Dispersal is important for exploitation of new habitat and for outbreeding. A precondition for socia...
The evolutionary transition from solitary to group living in spiders implies the progressive loss of...
Social spiders most likely evolved from subsocial-like ancestors, species in which siblings remain t...
The evolution of cooperation requires benefits of group living to exceed costs. Hence, some componen...
Cooperation and group living often evolves through kin selection. However, associations between unre...
Group-living behavior is taxonomically widespread but rare in spiders. The conventional view is that...
Group-living behavior is taxonomically widespread but rare in spiders. The conventional view is that...
ABSTRACT. In sub-social spiders, restricted dispersal of young (i.e., natal philopatry) and the pote...
A major goal of evolutionary research is to elucidate the processes involved in the evolution of gro...
Social cooperative spiders from diverse taxonomic families share life-history and demographic traits...
Sociality – cooperative group living – is ubiquitous in the natural world, yet our understanding of ...
Across several animal taxa, the evolution of sociality involves a suite of characteristics, a 'socia...
The evolution of group living is regarded as a major evolutionary transition and is commonly met wit...
Many models have been advanced to suggest how different expressions of sociality have evolved and ar...
Animal social systems come in a wide range of forms characterized by different types of group-living...
Dispersal is important for exploitation of new habitat and for outbreeding. A precondition for socia...
The evolutionary transition from solitary to group living in spiders implies the progressive loss of...
Social spiders most likely evolved from subsocial-like ancestors, species in which siblings remain t...
The evolution of cooperation requires benefits of group living to exceed costs. Hence, some componen...
Cooperation and group living often evolves through kin selection. However, associations between unre...