Reciprocal Rewards Stabilize Cooperation in the Mycorrhizal Symbiosis
共生
互惠的
生物
遗传学
细菌
语言学
哲学
作者
E. Toby Kiers,Marie Duhamel,Yugandhar Beesetty,Jerry A. Mensah,Oscar Franken,Erik Verbruggen,Carl R. Fellbaum,George A. Kowalchuk,Miranda M. Hart,Alberto Bago,Todd M. Palmer,Stuart A. West,Philippe Vandenkoornhuyse,Jan Jansa,Heike Bücking
出处
期刊:Science [American Association for the Advancement of Science] 日期:2011-08-11卷期号:333 (6044): 880-882被引量:1570
Plants and their arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal symbionts interact in complex underground networks involving multiple partners. This increases the potential for exploitation and defection by individuals, raising the question of how partners maintain a fair, two-way transfer of resources. We manipulated cooperation in plants and fungal partners to show that plants can detect, discriminate, and reward the best fungal partners with more carbohydrates. In turn, their fungal partners enforce cooperation by increasing nutrient transfer only to those roots providing more carbohydrates. On the basis of these observations we conclude that, unlike many other mutualisms, the symbiont cannot be "enslaved." Rather, the mutualism is evolutionarily stable because control is bidirectional, and partners offering the best rate of exchange are rewarded.