大黄蜂社会与生态性状的比较进化。

IF 16.7 1区 农林科学 Q1 ENTOMOLOGY
Heather M Hines
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引用次数: 0

摘要

大黄蜂(Bombus)是全球重要的关键传粉者,因此从社会进化到觅食经济学的许多生物学方面都是典型的分类群。在大约265个物种中,许多物种正在减少,这推动了旨在更好地了解哪些特征使它们易受影响的研究。尽管在分类学和自然史研究方面有着悠久的历史,但它们的大部分生物学特性都是通过少数几个商业上可用的物种来了解的。本文综述了大黄蜂生物特征多样性的广度,为它们的生物学、进化和保护提供了一个比较的视角。它具有与它们的保护最相关的生态特征,以及这些原始群居蜜蜂的特征,这些特征使我们了解了它们的社会进化。这些特征中的许多都是相互依赖的,这使得广泛的比较分析对于解释进化和衰退很有价值。这些数据是在系统发育背景下组织的,以显示性状相关性和知识差距的模式,突出了亚洲和南美物种的自然历史数据的不足。强调了由于数据标准化而造成的比较解释的局限性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Comparative Evolution of Social and Ecological Traits in Bumble Bees.

Bumble bees (Bombus) are prominent keystone pollinators globally and thus serve as model taxa for numerous facets of biology from social evolution to foraging economics. Many of the ∼265 species are in decline, motivating research that aims to better understand which traits make them susceptible. Despite a long history of taxonomic and natural history research, much of their biology is understood from just a few commercially available species. This review compiles the breadth of biotic trait diversity of bumble bees to provide a comparative perspective on their biology, evolution, and conservation. It features ecological traits most pertinent to their conservation, as well as traits of these primitively eusocial bees that inform our understanding of their social evolution. Many of these traits are interdependent, making a broadly comparative analysis valuable for interpreting evolution and declines. These data are organized in a phylogenetic context to show patterns of trait correlation and knowledge gaps, highlighting the depauperate natural history data in Asian and South American species. Limitations in comparative interpretation due to data standardization are emphasized.

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来源期刊
Annual review of entomology
Annual review of entomology 生物-昆虫学
CiteScore
45.70
自引率
0.80%
发文量
46
期刊介绍: The Annual Review of Entomology, a publication dating back to 1956, offers comprehensive reviews of significant developments in the field of entomology.The scope of coverage spans various areas, including:biochemistry and physiology, morphology and development, behavior and neuroscience, ecology, agricultural entomology and pest management, biological control, forest entomology, acarines and other arthropods, medical and veterinary entomology, pathology, vectors of plant disease, genetics, genomics, and systematics, evolution, and biogeography.
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