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Douglas, AE. 2008. Conflict, cheats and the persistence of symbioses. NEW PHYTOLOGIST. 177(4):849-858.
Address:
Douglas, AE, Univ York, Dept Biol, York YO10 5YW, N Yorkshire, England
Many symbioses are widespread, abundant, and evolutionarily persistent.
This is despite unambiguous evidence for conflict between the partners
and the existence of cheats that use benefits derived from their
partners while providing reduced or no services in return. Evidence
from a diversity of associations suggests that symbioses are robust to
cheating in several ways. Some symbioses persist despite conflict and
cheating because of the selective advantage of cost-free interactions
(also known as byproduct mutualistic interactions), which incur no
conflict. There is also evidence for the suppression of cheating by
sanctions imposed by partners in some symbioses, and vertical
transmission has been shown experimentally to promote traits that
enhance partner performance. It is argued that these processes
contribute to the apparent rarity of evolutionary transitions from
symbiosis to parasitism. There is strong phylogenetic evidence for the
evolutionary reversion of various symbiotic organisms to free-living
lifestyles, but at least some of these transitions can be attributed to
selection pressures other than within-symbiosis conflict. The principal
conclusion is that, although conflict is common in symbioses, it is
generally managed and contained.
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