Document Type
Article
Publication Date
3-22-2013
Abstract
Undertaking behavior is an essential adaptation to social life that is critical for colony hygiene in enclosed nests. Social insects dispose of dead individuals in various fashions to prevent further contact between corpses and living members in a colony. Focusing on three groups of eusocial insects (bees, ants, and termites) in two phylogenetically distant orders (Hymenoptera and Isoptera), we review mechanisms of death recognition, convergent and divergent behavioral re-sponses toward dead individuals, and undertaking task allocation from the perspective of division of labor. Distinctly different solutions (e.g., corpse removal, burial and cannibalism) have evolved, independently, in the holometabolous hymenopterans and hemimetabolous isopterans toward the same problem of corpse management. In addition, issues which can lead to a better understanding of the roles that undertaking behavior has played in the evolution of eusociality are discussed. © Ivyspring International Publisher.
Publication Source (Journal or Book title)
International Journal of Biological Sciences
First Page
313
Last Page
321
Recommended Citation
Sun, Q., & Zhou, X. (2013). Corpse management in social insects. International Journal of Biological Sciences, 9 (3), 313-321. https://doi.org/10.7150/ijbs.5781