Asymmetric or diffusive co-evolution generates meta-populations in fig-fig wasp mutualisms

被引:0
|
作者
RuiWu Wang
Yan Yang
Natasha L. Wiggins
机构
[1] Chinese Academy of Sciences,State Key Laboratory of Genetic Resources and Evolution, Kunming Institute of Zoology
[2] University of Tasmania,School of Plant Science
来源
Science China Life Sciences | 2014年 / 57卷
关键词
asymmetric co-evolution; inter-specific cooperation; meta-population; mutualism;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Co-evolutionary theory assumes co-adapted characteristics are a positive response to counter those of another species, whereby co-evolved species reach an evolutionarily stable interaction through bilateral adaptation. However, evidence from the fig-fig wasp mutualistic system implies very different co-evolutionary selection mechanisms, due to the inherent conflict among interacted partners. Fig plants appear to have discriminatively enforced fig wasps to evolve “adaptation characteristics” that provide greater benefit to the fig, and fig wasps appear to have diversified their evolutionary strategies in response to discriminative enforcement by figs and competition among different fig wasp species. In what appears to be an asymmetric interaction, the prosperity of cooperative pollinating wasps should inevitably lead to population increases of parasitic individuals, thus resulting in localized extinctions of pollinating wasps. In response, the sanctioning of parasitic wasps by the fig should lead to a reduction in the parasitic wasp population. The meta-populations created by such asymmetric interactions may result in each population of coevolved species chaotically oscillated, temporally or evolutionarily.
引用
收藏
页码:596 / 602
页数:6
相关论文
共 10 条
  • [1] Asymmetric or diffusive co-evolution generates meta-populations in fig-fig wasp mutualisms
    Wang Ruiwu
    Yang Yan
    Wiggins, Natasha L.
    SCIENCE CHINA-LIFE SCIENCES, 2014, 57 (06) : 596 - 602
  • [2] Asymmetric or diffusive co-evolution generates meta-populations in fig-fig wasp mutualisms
    WANG RuiWu
    YANG Yan
    WIGGINS Natasha L.
    Science China(Life Sciences), 2014, 57 (06) : 596 - 602
  • [3] Diffusive coevolution and mutualism maintenance mechanisms in a fig-fig wasp system
    Wang, Rui-Wu
    Sun, Bao-Fa
    Zheng, Qi
    ECOLOGY, 2010, 91 (05) : 1308 - 1316
  • [4] Asymmetric interaction and indeterminate fitness correlation between cooperative partners in the fig-fig wasp mutualism
    Wang, Rui-Wu
    Sun, Bao-Fa
    Zheng, Qi
    Shi, Lei
    Zhu, Lixing
    JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY INTERFACE, 2011, 8 (63) : 1487 - 1496
  • [5] Molecular phylogenies of fig pollinating and non-pollinating wasps and the implications for the origin and evolution of the fig-fig wasp mutualism
    Machado, CA
    Herre, EA
    McCafferty, S
    Bermingham, E
    JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY, 1996, 23 (04) : 531 - 542
  • [6] FLOWERING ASYNCHRONY AND MATING SYSTEM EFFECTS ON REPRODUCTIVE ASSURANCE AND MUTUALISM PERSISTENCE IN FRAGMENTED FIG-FIG WASP POPULATIONS
    Gates, Daniel J.
    Nason, John D.
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY, 2012, 99 (04) : 757 - 768
  • [7] Co-evolutionary dynamics within the fig-fig wasp mutualism;: sycoecine and agaonid fig wasps associated with Ficus section Galoglychia
    Underhill, J. G.
    Tolley, K. A.
    Van Noort, S.
    SOUTH AFRICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY, 2008, 74 (02) : 380 - 380
  • [9] Co-evolution of enzyme activities and latex in fig (Ficus carica L.) during fruit maturity process
    Lazreg-Aref, H.
    Gaaliche, B.
    Ladhari, A.
    Hammami, M.
    Hammami, S. O.
    SOUTH AFRICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY, 2018, 115 : 143 - 152
  • [10] How to deal with potentially huge dimensional state space:: The meta-dynamics approach-application to a model of the co-evolution of bacterio-phage populations
    Baguelin, Marc
    LeFevre, Jacques
    Richard, Jean-Pierre
    JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL AND APPLIED MATHEMATICS, 2007, 205 (02) : 687 - 695