Why do mutualists perform costly behaviours that benefit individuals of a different species? One of the factors that may stabilize mutualistic interactions is when individuals preferentially reward more mutualistic (beneficial) behaviour and/or punish less mutualistic (more parasitic) behaviour. We develop a model that shows how such sanctions provide a fitness benefit to the individuals that carry them out. Although this approach could be applied to a number of symbioses, we focus on how it could be applied to the legume-rhizobia interaction. Specifically, we demonstrate how plants can be selected to supply preferentially more resources to (or be less likely to senesce) nodules that are fixing more N-2 (termed plant sanctions). We have pre...
The stabilization of host–symbiont mutualism against the emergence of parasitic individuals is pivot...
Microbial symbionts exhibit broad genotypic variation in their fitness effects on hosts, leaving hos...
Mutualisms can be viewed as biological markets in which partners of different species exchange goods...
Why do mutualists perform costly behaviours that benefit individuals of a different species? One of ...
Why do rhizobia expend resources on fixing N(2) for the benefit of their host plant, when they could...
Explaining mutualistic cooperation between species remains one of the greatest problems for evolutio...
A fundamental goal in ecology and evolutionary biology has been to understand how microevolutionary ...
Two important questions about mutualisms are how the fitness costs and benefits to the mutualist par...
Many models of mutualisms show that mutualisms are unstable if hosts lack mechanisms enabling prefer...
SYNOPSIS. Mutualistic interactions are widespread and obligatory for many organisms, yet their evolu...
Many organisms cooperate with other species for nutrition, protection, or dispersal. Why partners in...
SYNOPSIS. Mutualistic interactions are widespread and obligatory for many organisms, yet their evolu...
Microbial mutualists provide substantial benefits to hosts that feed back to enhance the fitness of ...
The origin and persistence of mutualism is difficult to explain because of the widespread occurrence...
Mutualisms are cooperative interactions between members of different species, often involving the tr...
The stabilization of host–symbiont mutualism against the emergence of parasitic individuals is pivot...
Microbial symbionts exhibit broad genotypic variation in their fitness effects on hosts, leaving hos...
Mutualisms can be viewed as biological markets in which partners of different species exchange goods...
Why do mutualists perform costly behaviours that benefit individuals of a different species? One of ...
Why do rhizobia expend resources on fixing N(2) for the benefit of their host plant, when they could...
Explaining mutualistic cooperation between species remains one of the greatest problems for evolutio...
A fundamental goal in ecology and evolutionary biology has been to understand how microevolutionary ...
Two important questions about mutualisms are how the fitness costs and benefits to the mutualist par...
Many models of mutualisms show that mutualisms are unstable if hosts lack mechanisms enabling prefer...
SYNOPSIS. Mutualistic interactions are widespread and obligatory for many organisms, yet their evolu...
Many organisms cooperate with other species for nutrition, protection, or dispersal. Why partners in...
SYNOPSIS. Mutualistic interactions are widespread and obligatory for many organisms, yet their evolu...
Microbial mutualists provide substantial benefits to hosts that feed back to enhance the fitness of ...
The origin and persistence of mutualism is difficult to explain because of the widespread occurrence...
Mutualisms are cooperative interactions between members of different species, often involving the tr...
The stabilization of host–symbiont mutualism against the emergence of parasitic individuals is pivot...
Microbial symbionts exhibit broad genotypic variation in their fitness effects on hosts, leaving hos...
Mutualisms can be viewed as biological markets in which partners of different species exchange goods...