Abstract
Termites are fully social insects, with an extraordinary range of morphological forms. It is now clearly established that they are a very specialised form of cockroach, with far more complex social systems than other cockroaches, and with a far wider range of diets. Termites all live in colonies, with reproductives (kings, queens, and nymphs), soldiers and “helpers” (true workers and also immature stages that assist within the colony to some extent). Termite morphological and anatomical adaptations are caste-specific, with structures evolving independently in reproductives (to allow dispersal, pair bonding and fecundity), workers (foraging and feeding, tending and feeding of immatures, nest construction) and soldiers (only defence). The modifications seen in termite societies are similar to those found in the somatic parts of multicellular organisms, leading to the idea that a termite colony is best thought of as a single organism (or, more controversially, a “superorganism”). The structures that termites build, the mounds and nests, might also be defined as part of this organism. Mounds and nests contribute greatly to the well-being of termite colonies by providing shelter, fortifications and climate control. Overall, termites have amongst the most complex social, anatomical and structural adaptations of any animal.
Keywords
- Dead Wood
- Fore Wing
- Malpighian Tubule
- Termite Mound
- Marginal Tooth
These keywords were added by machine and not by the authors. This process is experimental and the keywords may be updated as the learning algorithm improves.
This is a preview of subscription content, access via your institution.
Buying options








Notes
- 1.
Marais’s work first appeared in a series of magazine articles in the early 1920s, and was published as a book (Die Siel van die Mier) in 1937, a year after his death. Modern editions in English have been published by Penguin Books, and most recently by New York University Press and by Osiran Books. The text is widely available. A similar work (The Life of the White Ant) produced in 1927 by Maurice Maeterlinck (George Allen and Unwin Ltd) is now considered to plagiarise Marais’s ideas.
References
Backwell LR, d’Errico F (2001) Evidence of termite foraging by Swartkrans early hominids. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 98:1358–1363
Boomsma JJ (2009) Lifetime monogamy and the evolution of eusociality. Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci 364:3191–3207
Cribb BW, Stewart A, Huang H, et al (2008) Unique zinc mass in mandibles separates drywood termites from other groups of termites. Naturwissenschaften 95:433–441
Crosland, MWJ, Su, N-Y, Scheffrahn, RH (2005) Arolia in termites (Isoptera): functional significance and evolutionary loss. Insectes Soc, 52:63–66
Das I, Coe M (1994) Dental morphology and diet in anuran amphibians from South India. J Zool 233:417–427
Davies RG, Eggleton P, Jones DT, et al (2003) Evolution of termite functional diversity: analysis and synthesis of local ecological and regional influences on local species richness. J Biogeogr 30:847–877
De Visser SN, Freymann BP, Schnyder H (2008) Trophic interactions among invertebrates in termitaria in the African savanna: a stable isotope approach. Ecol Entomol 33:758–764
Dial KP, Vaughan TA (1987) Opportunistic predation on alate termites in Kenya. Biotropica 19:185–187
Donovan SE (2002) A morphological study of the enteric valves of the Afrotropical Apicotermitinae (Isoptera: Termitidae). J Nat Hist 36:1823–1840
Donovan SE, Eggleton P, Bignell DE (2001) Gut content analysis and a new feeding group classification of termites. Ecol Entomol 26:356–366
Donovan SE, Jones DT, Sands WA, Eggleton P (2000) The morphological phylogenetics of termites (Isoptera). Biol J Linn Soc 70:467–513
Eggleton P, Beccaloni G, Inward D (2007) Save Isoptera: a comment on Inward et al. – response to Lo et al. Biol Lett 3:564–565
Eggleton P, Bignell DE, Sands WA, et al (1996) The diversity, abundance and biomass of termites under differing levels of disturbance in the Mbalmayo Forest Reserve, southern Cameroon. Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci 351:51–68
Emerson AE (1965) A review of the Mastotermitidae (Isoptera), including a new fossil genus from Brazil. Am Mus Novit 2236:1–46
Engel MS, Grimaldi DA, Krishna K (2009) Termites (Isoptera): their phylogeny, classification, and rise to ecological dominance. Am Mus Novit 3650:1–27
Higashi M, Abe T, Burns TP (1992) Carbon-nitrogen balance and termite ecology. Proc R Soc Lond B Biol Sci 249:303–308
Holldobler B, Wilson EO (2009) The superorganism: the beauty, elegance, and strangeness of insect societies. W. W. Norton, New York, NY and London, 522 pp
Holmgren N (1909) Termitenstudien I. Anatomische Untersuchungen. Klg Svenska Vetenskapsakad Handl 44:1–215
Holt JA, Lepage M (2000) Termites and soil properties. In: Abe T, Bignell DE, Higashi M (eds) Termites: evolution, sociality, symbioses, ecology. Kluwer Academic Publisher, Dordrecht, pp 389–407
Hyodo F, Tayasu L, Konaté S, et al (2008) Gradual enrichment of 15N with humification in a below-ground food web: relationship between 15N and diet age determioned using 14C. Funct Ecol 22:516–522
Inward D, Beccaloni G, Eggleton P (2007a) Death of an order: a comprehensive molecular phylogenetic study confirms that termites are eusocial cockroaches. Biol Lett 3:331–335
Inward DJG, Vogler P, Eggleton P (2007b) A comprehensive phylogenetic analysis of termites (Isoptera) illuminates key aspects of their evolutionary biology. Mol Phylogenet Evol 44:953–967
Jaffe K, Ramos C, Issa S (1995) Trophic interactions between ants and termites that share common cests. Ann Entomol Soc Am 88:328–333
Jeschke JM, Tollrian R (2007) Prey swarming: which predators become confused and why? Anim Behav 74:387–393
Ji R, Brune A (2005) Digestion of peptidic residues in humic substances by an alkali-stable and humic-acid tolerant proteolytic activity in the gut of soil-feeding termites. Soil Biol Biochem 37:1648–1655
Ji R, Brune A (2006) Nitrogen mineralization, ammonia accumulation, and emission of gaseous NH3 by soil-feeding termites. Biogeochemistry 78:267–283
Kambhampati S, Eggleton P (2000) Taxonomy and phylogrny of termites. In: Abe T, Bignell DE, Higashi M (eds) Termites: evolution, sociality, symbioses, ecology. Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht, pp 1–23
Koepfli KP, Jenks SM, Eizirik E, et al (2006) Molecular systematics of the Hyaenidae: relationships of a relictual lineage resolved by a molecular supermatrix. Mol Phylogenet Evol 38:603–620
Korb J (2003) Thermoregulation and ventilation of termite mounds. Naturwissenschaften 90:212–219
Korb J (2008) Termites, hemimetabolous diploid white ants? Front Zool 5:15
Korb J, Linsenmair KE (2000) Ventilation of termite mounds: new results require a new model. Behav Ecol 11:486–494
Leal IR, Oliveira PS (1995) Behavioral ecology of theneotropical termite hunting ant Pachycondyla (=Termitopone) marginata – colony founding, group-raiding and migratory patterns. Behav Ecol Sociobiol 37:373–383
Legendre F, Whiting MF, Bordereau C, et al (2008) The phylogeny of termites (Dictyoptera: Isoptera) based on mitochondrial and nuclear markers: implications for the evolution of the worker and pseudergate castes, and foraging behaviors. Mol Phylogenet Evol 48:615–627
Lo N, Engel MS, Cameron S, et al (2007) Save Isoptera: a comment on Inward et al. Biol Lett 3:562–563
Longrich NR, Currie PJ (2009) Albertonykus borealis, a new alvarezsaur (Dinosauria: Theropoda) from the Early Maastrichtian of Alberta, Canada: implications for the systematics and ecology of the Alvarezsauridae. Cretaceous Res 30:239–252
Luo ZX, Wible JR (2005) A late Jurassic digging mammal and early mammalian diversification. Science 308:103–107
Luscher M (1951) Air-conditioned nests. Sci Am 205:138–145
Martius C, Bandeira AG, da Silva Medeiros LG (1996) Variation in termite alate swarming in rain forests of central Amazonia. Ecotropica 2:1–11
Matsuura K (2002) Colony-level stabilization of soldier head width for head-plug defense in the termite Reticulitermes speratus (Isoptera: Rhinotermitidae). Behav Ecol Sociobiol 51:172–179
Mitchell JD (2007) Swarming and pairing in the fungus-growing termite, Macrotermes natalensis (Haviland) (Isoptera: Macrotermitinae). Afr Entomol 15:153–160
Miura T, Matsumoto T (1998) Foraging organization of the open-air processional lichen-feeding termite Hospitalitermes (Isoptera, termitidae) in Borneo. Insectes Soc 45:17–32
Morrow EH (2004) How the sperm lost its tail: the evolution of aflagellate sperm. Biol Rev 79:795–814
Nalepa CA, Lenz M (2000) The ootheca of Mastotermes darwiniensis Froggatt (Isoptera: Mastotermitidae): homology with cockroach oothecae. Proc R Soc Lond B Biol Sci 267:1809–1813
Noirot C (2001) The gut of termites (Isoptera). Comparative anatomy, systematics, phylogeny. II. Higher termites (Termitidae). Ann Soc Entomol Fr 37:431–471
Noirot C, Pasteels JM (1987) Ontogenic development and evolution of the worker caste in termites. Experientia 43:851–860
Ohkuma M (2003) Termite symbiotic systems: efficient biorecycling of lignocellulose. Appl Microbiol Biotechnol 61:1–9
Perna A, Jost C, Couturier E (2008) The structure of gallery networks in the nests of termite Cubitermes spp. revealed by X-ray tomography. Naturwissenschaften 95:877–884
Prestwich GD (1984) Defense-mechanisms of termites. Annu Rev Entomol 29:201–232
Riparbelli MG, Callaini G, Mercati D, et al (2009) Centrioles to basal bodies in the spermiogenesis of Mastotermes darwiniensis (Insecta, Isoptera). Cell Motil Cytoskeleton 66:248–259
Roisin Y (2001) Caste sex ratios, sex linkage, and reproductive strategies in termites. Insectes Soc 48:224–230
Roux EA, Roux M, Korb J (2009) Selection on defensive traits in a sterile caste – caste evolution: a mechanism to overcome life-history trade-offs? Evol Dev 11:80–87
Ruggiero RG, Fay FM (1994) Utilization of termitarium soils by elephants and its ecological implications. Afri J Ecol 32:222–232
Sands WA (1982) Agonistic behavior of African soldierless Apicotermitinae (Isoptera, Termitidae). Sociobiology 7:61–72
Sands WA (1998) The identification of worker castes of termite genera from soil of African and the Middle East. CAB International, Wallingford, CT
Santos CA, Costa-Leonard AM (2006) Anatomy of the frontal gland and ultramorphology of the frontal tube in the soldier caste of species of Nasutitermitinae (Isoptera, Termitidae). Microsc Res Tech 69:913–918
Scholtz OI, Macleod N, Eggleton P (2008) Termite soldier defence strategies: a reassessment of Prestwich’s classification and an examination of the evolution of defence morphology using extended eigenshape analyses of head morphology. Zool J Linn Soc Lond 153:631–650
Suzuki S, Kuroda S, Nishihara T (1995) Tool-set for termite-fishing by chimpanzees in the Ndoki Forest, Congo. Behaviour 132:219–235
Thorne BL, Breisch NL, Muscedere ML (2003) Evolution of eusociality and the soldier caste in termites: influence of intraspecific competition and accelerated inheritance. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 100:12808–12813
Turner JS, Soar RM (2008) Beyond biomimicry. What termites can tell us about realizing the living building. Proceedings of the First International Conference on Industrialized, Intelligent Construction (I3CON) 1: 1–18
Ware JL, Litman J, Klass KD, Spearman LA (2008) Relationships among the major lineages of Dictyoptera: the effect of outgroup selection on dictyopteran tree topology. Syst Entomol 33:429–450
Weesner F (1965) The termites of the United States. The National Pest Control Association, Elizabeth, NJ, 70 pp
Weesner F (1970) External anatomy. In: Krishna K, Weesner F (eds) Biology of termites, vol I. Academic Press, New York, NY, pp 1–23
Wilson EO (1992) The effects of complex social-life on evolution and biodiversity. Oikos 63:13–18
Yarnell RW, Metcalfe DJ, Dunstone N, et al (2008) The impact of fire on habitat use by the short-snouted elephant shrew (Elephantulus brachyrhynchus) in North West Province, South Africa. Afr Zool 43:45–52
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2010 Springer Netherlands
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Eggleton, P. (2010). An Introduction to Termites: Biology, Taxonomy and Functional Morphology. In: Bignell, D., Roisin, Y., Lo, N. (eds) Biology of Termites: a Modern Synthesis. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-90-481-3977-4_1
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-90-481-3977-4_1
Published:
Publisher Name: Springer, Dordrecht
Print ISBN: 978-90-481-3976-7
Online ISBN: 978-90-481-3977-4
eBook Packages: Biomedical and Life SciencesBiomedical and Life Sciences (R0)