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Wiley InterScience | |||||||||
![]() Journal of Evolutionary BiologyVolume 15 Issue 5, Pages 830 - 837 Published Online: 21 Aug 2002 Journal compilation © 2010 European Society for Evolutionary Biology Published on behalf of the European Society for Evolutionary Biology (ESEB)
Abstract | References | Full Text: HTML, PDF (Size: 148K) | Related Articles | Citation Tracking Copyright 2002 Blackwell Science Ltd KEYWORDS coevolution • legume • mycorrhizae • parasite • policing • punishment • rhizobia • symbiosis • virulence Abstract
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 |