SOCIAL BEHAVIOUR AND THE SUPERORGANISM:
IMPLICATIONS FOR DISEASE AND STABILITY IN
COMPLEX ANIMAL SOCIETIES AND COLONY
COLLAPSE DISORDER IN HONEYBEES

Niccolo Caldararo

Department of Anthropology - San Francisco State University
San Francisco, U.S.A.

Department of Biology - City College of San Francisco
San Francisco, U.S.A.

INDECS 13(1), 82-98, 2015
DOI 10.7906/indecs.13.1.10
Full text available here.
 

Received: 18 December 2014.
Accepted: 22 January 2014.
Regular article

ABSTRACT

Sociability, mass response to threat, food production and food sharing and an adaptable communication system are a suite of traits involved in the evolution of complex society in animals. Cycles of interaction characterize members of such societies and those of species in association that can affect disease structure in time and virulence. Colony Collapse Disorder (in North America, Honey Bee Depopulation Syndrome, or HBDS elsewhere) shows similarity to a number of mass behavioural responses in other social animals, especially in ants. A number of questions regarding the cause of CCD continues to make progress in fighting the disease difficult. Here information is provided that may result in an isolation of factors to identify the syndrome of effects that lead to the disease, based on studies of disease avoidance and illness behaviour in other animal species. Most of the work to date to discover a cause has focused on a direct relationship between a pathogen or parasite or environmental condition and the Disorder. Dysfunctional mass behaviour is even seen in humans, as during the Black Plague. Disease avoidance is an important survival tactic for many animals and if the mechanism is modified by a pathogen or toxin unusual outcomes may result. In complex animal societies the opportunity for other forms of disruption of social life are numerous.

KEY WORDS

colony collapse disorder, complex animal societies, disease avoidance, illness and behaviour

CLASSIFICATION

JEL:I12, I31
PACS:89.60.Gg


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