When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Cooperation (evolution) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cooperation_(evolution)

    Cooperation exists not only in humans but in other animals as well. The diversity of taxa that exhibits cooperation is quite large, ranging from zebra herds to pied babblers to African elephants . Many animal and plant species cooperate with both members of their own species and with members of other species.

  3. Eusociality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eusociality

    He observed multiple species of bees in order to investigate the different levels of animal sociality, all of which are different stages that a colony may pass through. Eusociality, which is the highest level of animal sociality a species can attain, specifically had three characteristics that distinguished it from the other levels: [1]

  4. Cooperation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cooperation

    Many animal species cooperate with each other in mutual symbiosis.One example is the ocellaris clownfish, which dwells among the tentacles of Ritteri sea anemones.The anemones provide the clownfish with protection from their predators (which cannot tolerate the stings of the sea anemone's tentacles), while the fish defend the anemones against butterflyfish (which eat anemones)

  5. Evolution of eusociality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolution_of_eusociality

    [19] [20] For example, the sponge-dwelling shrimp depend upon the sponge's feeding current for food, termites depend upon dead, decaying wood, and naked mole rats depend upon tubers in the ground. [5] [13] [21] Each of these resources has patchy distributions throughout the environments of these animals. This means there is a high cost to ...

  6. Sociality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sociality

    Sociality is the degree to which individuals in an animal population tend to associate in social groups (gregariousness) and form cooperative societies. Sociality is a survival response to evolutionary pressures. [1] For example, when a mother wasp stays near her larvae in the nest, parasites are less likely to eat the larvae. [2]

  7. Cooperative breeding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cooperative_breeding

    Sarah Blaffer Hrdy believes that cooperative breeding is an ancestral trait in humans, a controversial proposition. [ citation needed ] In most non-human primates, the reproductive success and survival of offspring is highly dependent to the mother's ability to produce food resources. [ 46 ]

  8. List of domesticated animals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_domesticated_animals

    Many animals on this second table are at least somewhat altered from wild-type animals due to their extensive interactions with humans, albeit not to the point that they are regarded as distinct forms (therefore, no separate wild ancestors are noted) or would be unable to survive if reintroduced to the wild.

  9. Hyperprosociality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyperprosociality

    The term was introduced in 2015 by Curtis Marean as "extremely cooperative behavior with unrelated individuals, often for the benefit of others or society without expectation of payoff". [1] Although originating from an evolutionary anthropological perspective, hyperprosociality has been utilized in modern pedagogy and psychology .