Thrall Peter H, Hochberg Michael E, Burdon Jeremy J, Bever James D
CSIRO Plant Industry, GPO Box 1600, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia.
Trends Ecol Evol. 2007 Mar;22(3):120-6. doi: 10.1016/j.tree.2006.11.007. Epub 2006 Nov 29.
Recent advances in our knowledge of parasitic and mutualistic associations have confirmed the central role of coevolutionary interactions in population and community ecology. Here, we discuss the potential coevolutionary interdependence of the strength and specificity of symbiotic interactions with the complexity and productivity of their environment. We predict that interactions become less beneficial with increasing environmental quality and that the association of productivity with symbiont specificity depends on the relative strengths of tradeoffs between host range and other life-history parameters. However, as biotic complexity increases, pathogen specificity is predicted to decline, whereas mutualist specificity will increase. Testing these predictions on a geographical scale would contribute significantly to the predictive science of coevolution, and to our ability to manage biological interactions embedded in increasingly fragmented landscapes.
我们对寄生和互利共生关系认识的最新进展证实了共同进化相互作用在种群和群落生态学中的核心作用。在此,我们讨论共生相互作用的强度和特异性与环境复杂性和生产力之间潜在的共同进化相互依存关系。我们预测,随着环境质量的提高,相互作用的益处会减少,并且生产力与共生体特异性之间的关联取决于宿主范围与其他生活史参数之间权衡的相对强度。然而,随着生物复杂性的增加,病原体特异性预计会下降,而互利共生体特异性会增加。在地理尺度上检验这些预测将极大地推动共同进化预测科学的发展,并有助于我们管理日益碎片化景观中所蕴含的生物相互作用的能力。