- published: 05 Apr 2010
- views: 18585
- author: DonExodus2
6:22
Evolution of Eusociality in Bees (Haplodiploidy)
I discuss the evolution of the peculiar social structure seen in hymanopterids. This video...
published: 05 Apr 2010
author: DonExodus2
Evolution of Eusociality in Bees (Haplodiploidy)
Evolution of Eusociality in Bees (Haplodiploidy)
I discuss the evolution of the peculiar social structure seen in hymanopterids. This video is a bit technical, and is targeted at people with some background...- published: 05 Apr 2010
- views: 18585
- author: DonExodus2
14:48
Haplodyploidy in honeybees
Haplodiploidy
Hymenoptera, the Order of insects that includes the bees, ants and wasps, ha...
published: 31 Aug 2013
Haplodyploidy in honeybees
Haplodyploidy in honeybees
Haplodiploidy Hymenoptera, the Order of insects that includes the bees, ants and wasps, has an interesting and unusual genetic method of sex determination. Males are haploid--they have only one copy of each chromosome--while females are diploid--two copies of each chromosome. Female Hymenoptera come about in the usual way, with a sperm from a male fertilizing a female's egg. One set of chromosomes comes from the father, the other from the mother, yielding a diploid daughter. Males, on the other hand, have a mother but no father. Males develop from an unfertilized egg, making them haploid. A female hymnopteran can have sons even if she never mates. Sex determination of this sort--haploid males and diploid females--is called haplodiploidy. Some other kinds of animals have the same sort of method of sex determination, but it is best studied in Hymenoptera. Gender is actually determined by a single gene (at least in bees, in which this is well explored) (Beye et al. 2003). If there is only one copy of the gene, because the animal is haploid, then the animal develops as a male. If there are two copies (representing two chromosomes) and they differ in their DNA sequences, then the animal is female. In other words, an animal that is heterozygous for the sex determination gene is a female. A homozygous diploid animal develops as a sterile male. In honey bees the homozygous diploids are killed as larvae, representing considerable waste to the colony. This means that inbreeding in the Hymenoptera is costly, and most Hymenoptera avoid inbreeding. Beyond this intriguing mechanism, haplodiploidy has important consequences that seem to affect social behavior: If a queen mates only once, her daughters are highly related to each other (called supersisters), because the father's sperm are all identical. A female is more related to her sisters (on average, 75% similar) than she is to her own daughters (on average 50% similar). A female is more related to her son (50 % similar) than she is to a brother (on average, 25% similar). These three factors combine to create a condition in which it may be more advantageous, evolutionarily speaking, for a female to help her mother produce sisters (to the female in question) than to produce her own daughters. Thus haplodiploidy opens the way for the evolution of a worker caste, devoted to helping their mother. If workers evolve under these conditions, then we would expect: That all workers will be female (males have no special pattern of relatedness in a haplodiploid system that would make working advantageous to them That workers will help their mother to lay and rear females, but That workers would prefer to lay their own male offspring, rather than rear brothers In fact, Hymenoptera workers are uniformly female and conflict between the queen and the workers over who lays the males eggs in a nest is common. The role of haplodiploidy in the evolution of worker Hymenoptera fits into an overall theory of how genetic similarity affects social behavior called kin selection which was developed by W. D. Hamilton.- published: 31 Aug 2013
- views: 1
24:56
Insect Sociality
I used a lot of Alex Wild's Photography ... So you should go look at his stuff =) http://w...
published: 05 Jun 2013
author: Nancy Miorelli
Insect Sociality
Insect Sociality
I used a lot of Alex Wild's Photography ... So you should go look at his stuff =) http://www.alexanderwild.com/ References: Links -- Sociality: Alex Wild Pho...- published: 05 Jun 2013
- views: 49
- author: Nancy Miorelli
43:28
Insect Physiology (Abridged)
References: The Virtual Grasshopper: http://www.ent.iastate.edu/ref/anatomy/ihop/ The Virt...
published: 17 Jul 2013
author: Nancy Miorelli
Insect Physiology (Abridged)
Insect Physiology (Abridged)
References: The Virtual Grasshopper: http://www.ent.iastate.edu/ref/anatomy/ihop/ The Virtual Roach: http://www.orkin.com/cockroaches/virtual-roach/ Entomolo...- published: 17 Jul 2013
- views: 27
- author: Nancy Miorelli
13:03
Thôi về với đèn dầu nước giếng...với con dê...con ong...con dế...thôi
http://www.angeltech.us/viet-anywhere/?cx=partner-pub-3967002253631993%3Ajwfl... gõ tiếng ...
published: 06 Jan 2013
author: long huỳnh xuân
Thôi về với đèn dầu nước giếng...với con dê...con ong...con dế...thôi
Thôi về với đèn dầu nước giếng...với con dê...con ong...con dế...thôi
http://www.angeltech.us/viet-anywhere/?cx=partner-pub-3967002253631993%3Ajwfl... gõ tiếng việt ở mọi nơi http://huynhxuanlong.blogspot.com/ http://www.facebo...- published: 06 Jan 2013
- views: 862
- author: long huỳnh xuân
23:33
Về với đèn dầu nước giếng với con dê,con ong,con dế..thôi T/P/nó đểu lắm
http://www.angeltech.us/viet-anywhere/?cx=partner-pub-3967002253631993%3Ajwfl... gõ tiếng ...
published: 07 Jan 2013
author: long huỳnh xuân
Về với đèn dầu nước giếng với con dê,con ong,con dế..thôi T/P/nó đểu lắm
Về với đèn dầu nước giếng với con dê,con ong,con dế..thôi T/P/nó đểu lắm
http://www.angeltech.us/viet-anywhere/?cx=partner-pub-3967002253631993%3Ajwfl... gõ tiếng việt ở mọi nơi http://huynhxuanlong.blogspot.com/ http://www.facebo...- published: 07 Jan 2013
- views: 706
- author: long huỳnh xuân
4:19
Hamilton's Rule
This lesson focuses on Hamilton's Rule and the evolution of Altruism SEED Smart Tutoring a...
published: 30 Oct 2012
author: Scotty Hardwick
Hamilton's Rule
Hamilton's Rule
This lesson focuses on Hamilton's Rule and the evolution of Altruism SEED Smart Tutoring all rights reserved www.seedsmarttutoring.com.- published: 30 Oct 2012
- views: 1174
- author: Scotty Hardwick
6:24
The Real Life of Social Insects
This is a video project produced by students of BIOL 355 Social Insects at Bucknell Univer...
published: 05 Dec 2011
author: Maegan Winkelmann
The Real Life of Social Insects
The Real Life of Social Insects
This is a video project produced by students of BIOL 355 Social Insects at Bucknell University. Excluding the movie clips, all footage was recorded by studen...- published: 05 Dec 2011
- views: 762
- author: Maegan Winkelmann
42:42
Biology 1A - Lecture 24: Chromatin
General Biology Lecture....
published: 24 Oct 2011
author: UCBerkeley
Biology 1A - Lecture 24: Chromatin
Biology 1A - Lecture 24: Chromatin
General Biology Lecture.- published: 24 Oct 2011
- views: 838
- author: UCBerkeley
4:28
Supercooperators: Evolution, Altruism and Human Behaviour
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i3plwTxdSO4 http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/evolution/83...
published: 17 May 2011
author: 2bsirius
Supercooperators: Evolution, Altruism and Human Behaviour
Supercooperators: Evolution, Altruism and Human Behaviour
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i3plwTxdSO4 http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/evolution/8382449/Martin-Nowak-a-helping-hand-for-evolution.html http://www.you...- published: 17 May 2011
- views: 1043
- author: 2bsirius
6:34
How Evolution Adds New Information
I discuss how evolution adds new information to a genome, thus refuting the common creatio...
published: 18 Jan 2010
author: DonExodus2
How Evolution Adds New Information
How Evolution Adds New Information
I discuss how evolution adds new information to a genome, thus refuting the common creationist myth. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16890400.- published: 18 Jan 2010
- views: 87758
- author: DonExodus2
7:29
Διαγωνισμός EUSO 2011 / ΕΚΦΕ Πειραιά - Νίκαιας
Τοπικός Προκριματικός Διαγωνισμός EUSO 2011 Σάββατο 27 Νοεμβρίου 2010....
published: 30 Nov 2010
author: ekfenikaias
Διαγωνισμός EUSO 2011 / ΕΚΦΕ Πειραιά - Νίκαιας
Διαγωνισμός EUSO 2011 / ΕΚΦΕ Πειραιά - Νίκαιας
Τοπικός Προκριματικός Διαγωνισμός EUSO 2011 Σάββατο 27 Νοεμβρίου 2010.- published: 30 Nov 2010
- views: 702
- author: ekfenikaias
Youtube results:
6:44
Dealing with the functionally inept.
BlogTV link: http://www.blogtv.com/People/LeagueOfReason 3pm EST 6/6/2010 His "thoughts": ...
published: 02 Jun 2010
author: DonExodus2
Dealing with the functionally inept.
Dealing with the functionally inept.
BlogTV link: http://www.blogtv.com/People/LeagueOfReason 3pm EST 6/6/2010 His "thoughts": http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9z1aHSqnDlA.- published: 02 Jun 2010
- views: 51062
- author: DonExodus2
7:56
Freud, Darwin and Self
This is the last of 15 weekly, post-seminar reflections (for ISP-lite, Spring 2011). In th...
published: 01 May 2011
author: C Barrentine
Freud, Darwin and Self
Freud, Darwin and Self
This is the last of 15 weekly, post-seminar reflections (for ISP-lite, Spring 2011). In this clip I revisit chapter 15 in Robert Wright's book 'The Moral Ani...- published: 01 May 2011
- views: 387
- author: C Barrentine
9:53
Unchanged Sharks- Flightless Birds- A response to seanmPWH -=PART I=-
I describe why sharks appear unchanged, and many animals appear similarly throughout the f...
published: 29 Jul 2009
author: DonExodus2
Unchanged Sharks- Flightless Birds- A response to seanmPWH -=PART I=-
Unchanged Sharks- Flightless Birds- A response to seanmPWH -=PART I=-
I describe why sharks appear unchanged, and many animals appear similarly throughout the fossil record. I use specific fossils, as well as pictures of those ...- published: 29 Jul 2009
- views: 35294
- author: DonExodus2