Insect life history and the evolution of bacterial mutualism
Citations Over TimeTop 1% of 2015 papers
Abstract
Bacterial symbiosis has played a fundamental role in the evolution of eukaryotes. However, we still know little about how cooperative relationships with bacteria originate, and why they form in some host species but not others. Facultative symbionts that are beneficial, but not essential, provide unique insights into these processes. We use data from over a hundred aphid species to test if host life history is associated with the presence of facultative symbionts. We find that aphid species that have mutualistic associations with ants that protect them from natural enemies are less likely to carry symbionts that provide similar benefits. We also find one symbiont species occurs more frequently in unrelated aphid species that specialise on certain plant genera. In addition, aphid species that attack multiple plants often carry different symbiont complements. Our findings provide evidence of the ecological conditions that facilitate stable, mutually beneficial relationships between microbes and eukaryotic hosts.
Related Papers
- → A Simple Model of Mutualism(1983)120 cited
- → EVOLUTIONARY STABILITY IN A 400-MILLION-YEAR-OLD HERITABLE FACULTATIVE MUTUALISM(2012)72 cited
- → Cost and Evolution of a Facultative Mutualism between Ants and Lycaenid Larvae (Lepidoptera)(1991)44 cited
- → Goby–shrimp mutualism: Costs and benefits of obligate versus facultative strategies(2018)5 cited
- → Patchy spread patterns in three-species bistable systems with facultative mutualism(2019)3 cited