Species engage in mutually beneficial interspecific interactions (mutualisms) that shape their population dynamics in ecological communities. Species engaged in mutualisms vary greatly in their degree of dependence on their partner from complete dependence (e.g. yucca and yucca moth mutualism) to low dependence (e.g. generalist bee with multiple plant species). While current empirical studies show that, in mutualisms, partner dependence can alter the speed of a species' range expansion, there is no theory that provides conditions when expansion is sped up or slowed down. To address this, we build a spatially explicit model incorporating the population dynamics of two dispersing species interacting mutualistically. We explore how mutualisms ...
A central tenet of ecology and biogeography is that the broad outlines of species ranges are determi...
Mutualisms are ubiquitous in nature, provide important ecosystem services, and involve many species ...
There is no consensus on when biotic interactions impact the range limits of species. Starting from ...
Species engage in mutually beneficial interspecific interactions (mutualisms) that shape their popul...
There are contrasting hypotheses about the influence of mutualisms on species richness. We provid...
There is a great deal of interest in the effects of biotic interactions on geographic distributions....
Ongoing and predicted global change makes understanding and predicting species' range shifts an urge...
The evolution of mutualism between host and symbiont communities plays an essential role in maintain...
Mutualistic interactions are robust biological systems with unique population dynamics that result i...
There is substantial controversy on whether species interactions (particularly competition) shape sp...
<div>Mutualism is an interspecific interaction understood where two or more species reciprocally inc...
Species are embedded in complex networks of interdependencies that may change across geographic loca...
A central tenet of ecology and biogeography is that the broad outlines of species ranges are determi...
Mutualisms are ubiquitous in nature, provide important ecosystem services, and involve many species ...
There is no consensus on when biotic interactions impact the range limits of species. Starting from ...
Species engage in mutually beneficial interspecific interactions (mutualisms) that shape their popul...
There are contrasting hypotheses about the influence of mutualisms on species richness. We provid...
There is a great deal of interest in the effects of biotic interactions on geographic distributions....
Ongoing and predicted global change makes understanding and predicting species' range shifts an urge...
The evolution of mutualism between host and symbiont communities plays an essential role in maintain...
Mutualistic interactions are robust biological systems with unique population dynamics that result i...
There is substantial controversy on whether species interactions (particularly competition) shape sp...
<div>Mutualism is an interspecific interaction understood where two or more species reciprocally inc...
Species are embedded in complex networks of interdependencies that may change across geographic loca...
A central tenet of ecology and biogeography is that the broad outlines of species ranges are determi...
Mutualisms are ubiquitous in nature, provide important ecosystem services, and involve many species ...
There is no consensus on when biotic interactions impact the range limits of species. Starting from ...