Unit name | Behaviour and Ecology of Social Insects |
---|---|
Unit code | BIOL31133 |
Credit points | 10 |
Level of study | H/6 |
Teaching block(s) |
Teaching Block 4 (weeks 1-24) |
Unit director | Professor. Franks |
Open unit status | Not open |
Pre-requisites |
None, but we strongly recommend that students should previously have studied BIOL20103 Acquisition of Behaviour and BIOL20104 Behavioural Ecology. |
Co-requisites |
None |
School/department | School of Biological Sciences |
Faculty | Faculty of Life Sciences |
Insect societies are good model systems for investigations of biological organization because they are built out of individual organisms. Hence, the interactions among these components parts can be studied macroscopically and most important of all – insect societies can be rapidly taken apart and put together again in different configurations. Their macroscopic, modular-structure means that the interactions among the components can be seen, studied, quantified, modelled mathematically and experimentally manipulated. Thus the study of social insects can provide generic insights into the most important and spectacular processes at the very core of the evolution of life.. We will investigate both strategic and tactical issues – combining analyses of the two fundamental questions: why have certain systems evolved? and how do they work? A further goal of this course is to reveal the power and the unexpected beauty of mathematical biology. There are brief question and answer sessions in each of the lectures and these are a source of informal feedback.
Aims:
This course will demonstrate how certain fabulously sophisticated social structures are based on surprisingly simple algorithms.
Students completing this course will be able to demonstrate an understanding of why insect sociobiology is important and how it is investigated. They will be able to demonstrate this understanding through a detailed knowledge not only of the results but also the experimental and modelling procedures involved in the case studies.
Lectures, interactive seminars/workshops and independent study.
End of Session exam (100%)
Most of the lecture material for the specific subjects considered in this Unit is taken from text books, research monographs, reviews and primary papers, and is not covered in any one textbook. You will receive a list of references at the start of teaching of this unit.
As background to this Unit, you will find a range of general textbooks in the library. Amongst these, you will find a good coverage of basic information in