Across the tree of life, hosts have evolved mechanisms to control and mediate interactions with symbiotic partners. We suggest that the evolution of physical structures that allow hosts to spatially separate symbionts, termed compartmentalization, is a common mechanism used by hosts. Such compartmentalization allows hosts to: (i) isolate symbionts and control their reproduction; (ii) reward cooperative symbionts and punish or stop interactions with non-cooperative symbionts; and (iii) reduce direct conflict among different symbionts strains in a single host. Compartmentalization has allowed hosts to increase the benefits that they obtain from symbiotic partners across a diversity of interactions, including legumes and rhizobia, plants and f...
Beneficial eukaryotic–bacterial partnerships are integral to animal and plant evolution. Understandi...
Mutually beneficial associations between individuals of different species, called mutualistic symbio...
Theory suggests that symbionts can readily evolve more parasitic or mutualistic strategies with resp...
Across the tree of life, hosts have evolved mechanisms to control and mediate interactions with symb...
Cooperative symbionts enable their hosts to exploit a diversity of environments. A low genetic diver...
Evolutionary theory suggests that the conditions required for the establishment of mutualistic symbi...
Symbiosis, where organisms of different species live closely together, is ubiquitous in our world. I...
In past work, we developed a computational model of the evolution of symbiotic entities (Model-S), b...
Online enhancement: appendix. Dryad data: http://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.s147c. abstract: Heritable...
Mutualistic symbiosis can be regarded as interspecific division of labour, which can improve the pro...
Symbiosis is a process that can generate evolutionary novelties and can extend the phenotypic niche ...
Background Symbiosis is a major source of evolutionary innovation and, by allowing species to explo...
© 2018. Published by The Company of Biologists Ltd. The concept of symbiosis – defined in 1879 by de...
Symbiosis, where organisms of different species live closely together, is ubiquitous in our world. I...
Abstract Symbiosis is one of the most fundamental relation-ships between or among organisms and incl...
Beneficial eukaryotic–bacterial partnerships are integral to animal and plant evolution. Understandi...
Mutually beneficial associations between individuals of different species, called mutualistic symbio...
Theory suggests that symbionts can readily evolve more parasitic or mutualistic strategies with resp...
Across the tree of life, hosts have evolved mechanisms to control and mediate interactions with symb...
Cooperative symbionts enable their hosts to exploit a diversity of environments. A low genetic diver...
Evolutionary theory suggests that the conditions required for the establishment of mutualistic symbi...
Symbiosis, where organisms of different species live closely together, is ubiquitous in our world. I...
In past work, we developed a computational model of the evolution of symbiotic entities (Model-S), b...
Online enhancement: appendix. Dryad data: http://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.s147c. abstract: Heritable...
Mutualistic symbiosis can be regarded as interspecific division of labour, which can improve the pro...
Symbiosis is a process that can generate evolutionary novelties and can extend the phenotypic niche ...
Background Symbiosis is a major source of evolutionary innovation and, by allowing species to explo...
© 2018. Published by The Company of Biologists Ltd. The concept of symbiosis – defined in 1879 by de...
Symbiosis, where organisms of different species live closely together, is ubiquitous in our world. I...
Abstract Symbiosis is one of the most fundamental relation-ships between or among organisms and incl...
Beneficial eukaryotic–bacterial partnerships are integral to animal and plant evolution. Understandi...
Mutually beneficial associations between individuals of different species, called mutualistic symbio...
Theory suggests that symbionts can readily evolve more parasitic or mutualistic strategies with resp...