دانلود کتاب Success and Dominance in Ecosystems: The Case of the Social Insects
by Edward O. Wilson
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عنوان فارسی: موفقیت و تسلط در اکوسیستم: مورد حشرات اجتماعی |
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جزییات کتاب
Ed Wilson's book addresses success and dominance in ecosystems
with professional mastery - matured over decades of devoted, critical
research. Defining 'success' as evolutionary longevity of a clade (a
species and its descendents), and 'dominance' as abundance of a clade
controlling the appropriation of biomass and energy and thus affecting
coexisting organisms, Wilson exemplifies his subject by referring
to eusocial insects, especially termites and ants but also bees and
wasps. Eusocial insects are characterized by care of young, overlap of
adult generations and division of labor among reproductive and nonreproductive
castes. They have achieved an overwhelming dominance
and exert a great impact on many other organisms. Their dominance
results from competitive superiority based on a sophisticated social
organization. Eusocial insects cover a large trophophoric area with
near-continuous exploration and defense. Functionally, their colonies
are so tightly integrated as to act as superorganisms. Success and
dominance of colonial life derive from parallel operations of multiple
workers maximizing achievements in the completion of tasks; aggressive,
even suicidal behavior; superior protection and exploitation of
resources; and enhanced control of a population's microenvironment.
Why then have social insects not entirely outcompeted their solitary
counterparts? The essence of Wilson's answer to this question:
while social insects prevail in terms of biomass in most terrestrial
habitats, solitary insects appear to 'fill the cracks' left by social insects,
and they breed faster on smaller amounts of resources.
Hawaii was not colonized by social insects before the establishment
of human societies. This remote archipelago thus provides a
chance to study the evolution of the endemic fauna and flora in the
absence of social insects. Wilson considers that freedom from social
insects - especially ants and termites - may have contributed significantly
to some of the characterizing traits of the Hawaiian biota, such
as flightlessness, lack of evasive behavior, increased abundance and
diversity of beetles and spiders, adaptive predation in some insect
groups, and loss of extrafloral nectaries in flowering plants.
Ed Wilson's small book is packed with facts, ideas and visions. It
floats on a sea of admiration and love for nature. I am sure the book
will stimulate further research, as well as interchange among terrestrial,
marine and limnetic ecologists, and it will carry the word of a
leading scholar devoted to analyzing, comprehending and protecting
nature far beyond professional borderlines.
[Otto Kinne, Director ECI, from Introduction]