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Wiley InterScience

Journal of Evolutionary Biology

Journal of Evolutionary Biology

Volume 15 Issue 5, Pages 830 - 837

Published Online: 21 Aug 2002

Journal compilation © 2010 European Society for Evolutionary Biology



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Sanctions and mutualism stability: when should less beneficial mutualists be tolerated?
S. A. West,* E. Toby Kiers,† I. Pen* & R. F. Denison
  * Institute of Cell, Animal & Population Biology, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK   Agronomy and Range Science, University of California, Davis, CA, USA
Correspondence:  Stuart A. West (Institute of Cell, Animal & Population Biology, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, EH9 3JT, UK. Tel.: +131 6505496; fax: +131 6506564; e-mail: stu.west@ed.ac.uk
Copyright 2002 Blackwell Science Ltd
KEYWORDS
coevolution • legume • mycorrhizae • parasite • policing • punishment • rhizobia • symbiosis • virulence

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionMaterials and methodsResultsDiscussionAppendix

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 N2 (termed plant sanctions). We have previously argued that appreciable levels of N2 fixation by rhizobia are only likely to be selected for in response to plant sanctions. Therefore, by showing that plant sanctions can also be favoured by natural selection, we are able to provide an explanation for the stability of the plant-legume mutualism.


Received 14 January 2002; revised 2 April 2002; accepted 12 April 2002

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1046/j.1420-9101.2002.00441.x About DOI

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