Re-thinking the social ladder approach for elucidating the evolution and molecular basis of insect societies

2019 
The evolution of large insect societies is a major evolutionary transition that occurred in the long-extinct ancestors of termites, ants, corbiculate bees, and vespid wasps. Researchers have long used “social ladder thinking”: assuming progressive stepwise phenotypic evolution and asserting that extant species with simple societies (e.g., some halictid bees) represent the ancestors of species with complex societies, and thus provide insight into general early steps of eusocial evolution. We discuss how this is inconsistent with data and modern evolutionary “tree thinking”. Comparative phylogenetic methods with broad sampling provide the best means to make rigorous inferences about ancestral traits and evolutionary transitions that occurred within each lineage, and to determine whether consistent phenotypic and genomic changes occurred across independent lineages.
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