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What does it mean to be highly social? In many cases being social implies a high local population density, interaction with the same group of individuals over an extended time period, and an overlapping of generations. Additional features of social species may be a wide geographical range, perhaps associated with ecological and behavioral plasticity, the latter often facilitated by cultural transmission of traditions.
Narrowing our perspective to the domain of PCI Evolutionary Biology, we might continue our question by asking whether being social predisposes one to a special evolutionary path toward the future.
Do social species evolve faster or slower than their more solitary relatives such that over time they are more unlike or similar to those relatives anagenesis? And are evolutionary changes in social species more or less likely to be accompanied by lineage splitting cladogenesis and ultimately speciation? The latter question is parallel to one first posed over 40 years ago West-Eberhard, ; Lande, for sexually selected traits: Do strong mating preferences and conspicuous courtship signals generate speciation via the Fisherian process or ecological divergence?
An extensive survey of birds had found little supporting evidence Price, , but a recent one that focused on plumage complexity in tanagers did reveal a relationship, albeit a weak one Price-Waldman et al. Because sexual selection has been viewed as a part of the broader process of social selection West-Eberhard, , it is thus fitting to extend our surveys to the evolutionary implications of being social.
Unlike the inquiry for a sexual selection - evolutionary change connection, a social behavior counterpart has remained relatively untreated. Diverse logistical problems might account for this oversight.