ABSTRACT Microbial symbionts provide benefits that contribute to the ecology and fitness of host plants and animals. Therefore, the evolutionary success of plants and animals fundamentally depends on long-term maintenance of beneficial associations. Most work investigating coevolution and symbiotic maintenance has focused on species-level associations, and studies are lacking that assess the impact of bacterial strain diversity on symbiotic associations within a coevolutionary framework. Here, we demonstrate that fitness in mutualism varies depending on bacterial strain identity, and this is consistent with variation shaping phylogenetic patterns and maintenance through fitness benefits. Through genome sequencing of nine bacterial symbiont ...
While examples of bacteria benefiting eukaryotes are increasingly documented, studies examining effe...
Symbioses between animals and microbes are ubiquitous, and often have drastic fitness effects on bot...
Organisms harbour myriad microbes which can be parasitic or protective against harm. The costs and b...
ABSTRACT Microbial symbionts provide benefits that contribute to the ecology and fitness of host pla...
International audienceCoevolution in mutualistic symbiosis can yield, because the interacting partne...
Abstract Background Symbioses between invertebrates and prokaryotes are biological systems of partic...
Background: Symbioses between invertebrates and prokaryotes are biological systems of particular int...
Nematodes are highly diverse animals capable of interacting with almost every other form of life on ...
Bacteria of the genus Xenorhabdus are symbionts of soil entomopathogenic nematodes of the genus Stei...
Coevolution between hosts and parasites is a major driver of rapid evolutionary change1 and diversif...
Nematodes in the genus Steinernema (Nematoda: Steinernematidae) and their associated bacteria Xenorh...
Abstract Background Steinernematid nematodes form obligate symbioses with bacteria from the genus Xe...
Entomopathogenic nematodes from Steinernema}genus are symbiotically associated with Xenorhabdus bact...
The coevolution of interacting species can lead to codependent mutualists. Little is known about the...
Species interactions can shift along the parasitism‐mutualism continuum. However, the consequences o...
While examples of bacteria benefiting eukaryotes are increasingly documented, studies examining effe...
Symbioses between animals and microbes are ubiquitous, and often have drastic fitness effects on bot...
Organisms harbour myriad microbes which can be parasitic or protective against harm. The costs and b...
ABSTRACT Microbial symbionts provide benefits that contribute to the ecology and fitness of host pla...
International audienceCoevolution in mutualistic symbiosis can yield, because the interacting partne...
Abstract Background Symbioses between invertebrates and prokaryotes are biological systems of partic...
Background: Symbioses between invertebrates and prokaryotes are biological systems of particular int...
Nematodes are highly diverse animals capable of interacting with almost every other form of life on ...
Bacteria of the genus Xenorhabdus are symbionts of soil entomopathogenic nematodes of the genus Stei...
Coevolution between hosts and parasites is a major driver of rapid evolutionary change1 and diversif...
Nematodes in the genus Steinernema (Nematoda: Steinernematidae) and their associated bacteria Xenorh...
Abstract Background Steinernematid nematodes form obligate symbioses with bacteria from the genus Xe...
Entomopathogenic nematodes from Steinernema}genus are symbiotically associated with Xenorhabdus bact...
The coevolution of interacting species can lead to codependent mutualists. Little is known about the...
Species interactions can shift along the parasitism‐mutualism continuum. However, the consequences o...
While examples of bacteria benefiting eukaryotes are increasingly documented, studies examining effe...
Symbioses between animals and microbes are ubiquitous, and often have drastic fitness effects on bot...
Organisms harbour myriad microbes which can be parasitic or protective against harm. The costs and b...