Insect societies – colonies of ants, bees, wasps and termites – vary enormously in their social complexity.
Social complexity is a broadly used term that encompasses many individual and colony-level traits and
characteristics such as colony size, polymorphism and foraging strategy. A number of earlier studies have
considered the relationships among various correlates of social complexity in insect societies; in this review,
we build upon those studies by proposing additional correlates and show how all correlates can be
integrated in a common explanatory framework. The various correlates are divided among four broad
categories (sections). Under ‘polyphenism’ we consider the differences among individuals, in particular
focusing upon ‘caste’ and specialization of individuals. This is followed by a section on ‘totipotency’ in which
we consider the autonomy and subjugation of individuals. Under this heading we consider various aspects
such as intracolony conflict, worker reproductive potential and physiological or morphological restrictions
which limit individuals’ capacities to perform a range of tasks or functions. A section entitled ‘organization
of work’ considers a variety of aspects, e.g. the ability to tackle group, team or partitioned tasks, foraging
strategies and colony reliability and efficiency. A final section, ‘communication and functional integration’,
considers how individual activity is coordinated to produce an integrated and adaptive colony. Within each
section we use illustrative examples drawn from the social insect literature (mostly from ants, for which there
is the best data) to illustrate concepts or trends and make a number of predictions concerning how a
particular trait is expected to correlate with other aspects of social complexity. Within each section we also
expand the scope of the arguments to consider these relationships in a much broader sense of ‘sociality’ by
drawing parallels with other ‘social’ entities such as multicellular individuals, which can be understood as
‘societies’ of cells. The aim is to draw out any parallels and common causal relationships among the
correlates. Two themes run through the study. The first is the role of colony size as an important factor
affecting social complexity. The second is the complexity of individual workers in relation to the complexity
of the colony. Consequently, this is an ideal opportunity to test a previously proposed hypothesis that
‘individuals of highly social ant species are less complex than individuals from simple ant species’ in light
of numerous social correlates. Our findings support this hypothesis. In summary, we conclude that, in
general, complex societies are characterized by large colony size, worker polymorphism, strong behavioural
specialization and loss of totipotency in its workers, low individual complexity, decentralized colony control
and high system redundancy, low individual competence, a high degree of worker cooperation when tackling
tasks, group foraging strategies, high tempo, multi-chambered tailor-made nests, high functional integration,
relatively greater use of cues and modulatory signals to coordinate individuals and heterogeneous patterns
of worker-worker interaction.