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寄生虫可能有助于稳定合作关系。

Parasites may help stabilize cooperative relationships.

作者信息

Little Ainslie E F, Currie Cameron R

机构信息

Department of Bacteriology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI 53706, USA.

出版信息

BMC Evol Biol. 2009 Jun 1;9:124. doi: 10.1186/1471-2148-9-124.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

The persistence of cooperative relationships is an evolutionary paradox; selection should favor those individuals that exploit their partners (cheating), resulting in the breakdown of cooperation over evolutionary time. Our current understanding of the evolutionary stability of mutualisms (cooperation between species) is strongly shaped by the view that they are often maintained by partners having mechanisms to avoid or retaliate against exploitation by cheaters. In contrast, we empirically and theoretically examine how additional symbionts, specifically specialized parasites, potentially influence the stability of bipartite mutualistic associations. In our empirical work we focus on the obligate mutualism between fungus-growing ants and the fungi they cultivate for food. This mutualism is exploited by specialized microfungal parasites (genus Escovopsis) that infect the ant's fungal gardens. Using sub-colonies of fungus-growing ants, we investigate the interactions between the fungus garden parasite and cooperative and experimentally-enforced uncooperative ("cheating") pairs of ants and fungi. To further examine if parasites have the potential to help stabilize some mutualisms we conduct Iterative Prisoner's Dilemma (IPD) simulations, a common framework for predicting the outcomes of cooperative/non-cooperative interactions, which incorporate parasitism as an additional factor.

RESULTS

In our empirical work employing sub-colonies of fungus-growing ants, we found that Escovopsis-infected sub-colonies composed of cheating populations of ants or fungi lost significantly more garden biomass than sub-colonies subjected to infection or cheating (ants or fungi) alone. Since the loss of fungus garden compromises the fitness of both mutualists, our findings suggest that the potential benefit received by the ants or fungi for cheating is outweighed by the increased concomitant cost of parasitism engendered by non-cooperation (cheating). IPD simulations support our empirical results by confirming that a purely cooperative strategy, which is unsuccessful in the classic IPD model, becomes stable when parasites are included.

CONCLUSION

Here we suggest, and provide evidence for, parasitism being an external force that has the potential to help stabilize cooperation by aligning the selfish interests of cooperative partners in opposition to a common enemy. Specifically, our empirical results and IPD simulations suggest that when two mutualists share a common enemy selection can favor cooperation over cheating, which may help explain the evolutionary stability of some mutualisms.

摘要

背景

合作关系的持久性是一个进化悖论;自然选择应青睐那些剥削其伙伴(作弊)的个体,这会导致合作在进化过程中瓦解。我们目前对互利共生关系(物种间合作)进化稳定性的理解,很大程度上受到一种观点的影响,即它们通常由伙伴拥有避免或报复作弊者剥削的机制来维持。相比之下,我们通过实证和理论研究额外的共生体,特别是专性寄生虫,如何潜在地影响二分互利共生关系的稳定性。在我们的实证研究中,我们聚焦于切叶蚁与其为获取食物而培育的真菌之间的专性互利共生关系。这种互利共生关系受到感染蚁巢真菌园的专性微真菌寄生虫(埃斯科沃普氏菌属)的侵害。我们利用切叶蚁的亚群体,研究真菌园寄生虫与合作的以及通过实验强制形成的不合作(“作弊”)的蚁类和真菌对之间的相互作用。为了进一步研究寄生虫是否有潜力帮助稳定某些互利共生关系,我们进行了重复囚徒困境(IPD)模拟——这是一个预测合作/非合作相互作用结果的常用框架,其中将寄生作为一个额外因素纳入。

结果

在我们使用切叶蚁亚群体的实证研究中,我们发现由作弊的蚁类或真菌群体组成的被埃斯科沃普氏菌感染的亚群体,其蚁巢真菌生物量的损失显著高于仅遭受感染或作弊(蚁类或真菌)的亚群体。由于蚁巢真菌的损失会损害两种互利共生者的适应性,我们的研究结果表明,蚁类或真菌通过作弊获得的潜在益处,被因不合作(作弊)而带来的寄生成本增加所抵消。IPD模拟证实了我们的实证结果,即当纳入寄生虫时,在经典IPD模型中不成功的纯合作策略变得稳定。

结论

在此我们提出并提供证据表明,寄生是一种外力,它有可能通过使合作伙伴的自私利益与共同敌人相对抗来帮助稳定合作。具体而言,我们的实证结果和IPD模拟表明,当两个互利共生者有共同敌人时,自然选择可能更青睐合作而非作弊,这可能有助于解释某些互利共生关系的进化稳定性。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/2f7f/2701933/fd2065956aed/1471-2148-9-124-1.jpg

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