We expand the comparative-advantage biological market-modelling framework to show how differences between partners, both in their abilities to acquire two resources and in their requirements for those resources, can affect the net benefit of participating in interspecific resource exchange. In addition, the benefits derived from resource trading depend strongly on the nature of the trade-off between the acquisition of one resource and the acquisition of another, described here by the shape (linear, convex or concave) of the resource acquisition constraints of the individuals involved. Combined with previous results, these analyses provide a suite of predictions about whether or not resource exchange is beneficial for two heterospecific indi...
International audienceUnderstanding the origins, conditions, advantages and limitations of cooperati...
Abstract. Can choice of mutualistic partners and the degree of their utilization determine (1) mutua...
Social organisms sometimes depend on help from reciprocating partners to solve adaptive problems [1]...
Natural selection favours those individuals that respond best to novel features of their selective e...
It has been argued that cooperative behavior in the plant-mycorrhizal mutualism resembles trade in a...
Mutualist interactions are thought to be ubiquitous, spanning all levels of biological organisation,...
Mutualisms are cooperative interactions between members of different species, often involving the tr...
International audienceMutualism is a biological association for a mutual benefit between two differe...
A large fraction of microbial life on earth exists in complex communities where metabolic exchange i...
AbstractThe economic theory of comparative advantage postulates that beneficial trading relationship...
The competitive exclusion principle is fundamental to understanding coexistence. Well-established th...
Mutually beneficial resource exchange is fundamental to global biogeochemical cycles and plant and a...
International audienceThe effects of partner choice have been documented in a large number of biolog...
International audienceIn this paper, we consider mutualism and the concept of the biological market ...
Despite the importance of human cooperation, how humans choose their cooperative partners and how th...
International audienceUnderstanding the origins, conditions, advantages and limitations of cooperati...
Abstract. Can choice of mutualistic partners and the degree of their utilization determine (1) mutua...
Social organisms sometimes depend on help from reciprocating partners to solve adaptive problems [1]...
Natural selection favours those individuals that respond best to novel features of their selective e...
It has been argued that cooperative behavior in the plant-mycorrhizal mutualism resembles trade in a...
Mutualist interactions are thought to be ubiquitous, spanning all levels of biological organisation,...
Mutualisms are cooperative interactions between members of different species, often involving the tr...
International audienceMutualism is a biological association for a mutual benefit between two differe...
A large fraction of microbial life on earth exists in complex communities where metabolic exchange i...
AbstractThe economic theory of comparative advantage postulates that beneficial trading relationship...
The competitive exclusion principle is fundamental to understanding coexistence. Well-established th...
Mutually beneficial resource exchange is fundamental to global biogeochemical cycles and plant and a...
International audienceThe effects of partner choice have been documented in a large number of biolog...
International audienceIn this paper, we consider mutualism and the concept of the biological market ...
Despite the importance of human cooperation, how humans choose their cooperative partners and how th...
International audienceUnderstanding the origins, conditions, advantages and limitations of cooperati...
Abstract. Can choice of mutualistic partners and the degree of their utilization determine (1) mutua...
Social organisms sometimes depend on help from reciprocating partners to solve adaptive problems [1]...