The emergence of animal societies offers unsolved problems for both evolutionary and ecological studies. Social spiders are specially well suited to address this problem given their multiple independent origins and distinct geographical distribution. Based on long term research on the spider genus Anelosimus, we developed a spatial model that recreates observed macroecological patterns in the distribution of social and subsocial spiders. We show that parallel gradients of increasing insect size and disturbance (rain, predation) with proximity to the lowland tropical rainforest would explain why social species are concentrated in the lowland wet tropics, but absent from higher elevations and latitudes. The model further shows that disturbanc...
The physical environment occupied by group-living animals can profoundly affect their cooperative so...
The role of ecology in the evolution and maintenance of arthropod sociality has received increasing ...
A first step toward understanding why sociality has evolved in a particular taxonomic group is to es...
Species ranges, which are manifestations of species ecological niches in space, are generally determ...
The puzzle of how complex and costly social behaviours have evolved in so many diverse organisms has...
Understanding the suite of ecological conditions that favor sociality —the tendency of organisms to ...
Social spiders most likely evolved from subsocial-like ancestors, species in which siblings remain t...
Metacommunity theory has advanced understanding of mechanisms shaping community structure. Four main...
Group-living organisms offer a unique perspective on how environmental gradients influence geographi...
Species that differ in their social system, and thus in traits such as group size and dispersal timi...
Species that differ in their social system, and thus in traits such as group size and dispersal timi...
Sociality in spiders represents serious evolutionary drawbacks, yet persists in some 20 species. So...
The relative costs and benefits of group living change with group size. In the social spider Anelosi...
Evolutionary and ecological theory predicts that closely related and similar species should coexist ...
We explored the role of group living and cooperation in resource use in a spider community where 4 c...
The physical environment occupied by group-living animals can profoundly affect their cooperative so...
The role of ecology in the evolution and maintenance of arthropod sociality has received increasing ...
A first step toward understanding why sociality has evolved in a particular taxonomic group is to es...
Species ranges, which are manifestations of species ecological niches in space, are generally determ...
The puzzle of how complex and costly social behaviours have evolved in so many diverse organisms has...
Understanding the suite of ecological conditions that favor sociality —the tendency of organisms to ...
Social spiders most likely evolved from subsocial-like ancestors, species in which siblings remain t...
Metacommunity theory has advanced understanding of mechanisms shaping community structure. Four main...
Group-living organisms offer a unique perspective on how environmental gradients influence geographi...
Species that differ in their social system, and thus in traits such as group size and dispersal timi...
Species that differ in their social system, and thus in traits such as group size and dispersal timi...
Sociality in spiders represents serious evolutionary drawbacks, yet persists in some 20 species. So...
The relative costs and benefits of group living change with group size. In the social spider Anelosi...
Evolutionary and ecological theory predicts that closely related and similar species should coexist ...
We explored the role of group living and cooperation in resource use in a spider community where 4 c...
The physical environment occupied by group-living animals can profoundly affect their cooperative so...
The role of ecology in the evolution and maintenance of arthropod sociality has received increasing ...
A first step toward understanding why sociality has evolved in a particular taxonomic group is to es...