Search results for "Mutualism"

showing 10 items of 51 documents

Genomic Changes in Bacteria: From Free-Living to Endosymbiotic Life

2007

Symbiosis is the association between two or more distinct organisms during at least one part of their lifecycle. Although this term is sometimes used in a narrower sense, it includes for most authors a set of different situations such as mutualism, parasitism and commensalism. Mutualism is defined as an association in which both partners derive benefit from living together. Parasitism is an association in which one of the partners benefits, while the other is harmed. Finally, commensalism is an association in which one of the two members benefits while the other is neither harmed nor obtains an advantage. In most cases, the association is established between a pluricellular eukaryote and a …

Mutualism (biology)GeneticsbiologyEndosymbiosisObligateBacteriocytefungiBacteriomebiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionbiology.organism_classificationCommensalismSymbiosisBotanybacteriaWolbachia
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Sex-specific interaction between arbuscular mycorrhizal and dark septate fungi in the dioecious plant Antennaria dioica (Asteraceae).

2012

Male and female plants of dioecious species often differ in their resource demands and this has been linked to secondary sexual dimorphism, including sex-specific interactions with other organisms such as herbivores and pollinators. However, little is known about the interaction between dioecious plants and fungal root endophytes. Plants may be simultaneously colonised by arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) and dark septate (DS) fungi. While it is well established that AM mutualism involves reciprocal transfer of photosynthates and mineral nutrients between roots of host plants and these fungi, the role of DS fungi remains controversial. Here, we report the temporal and spatial variation in AM and …

Mutualism (biology)HerbivoreDioecyfungifood and beveragesAntennaria dioicaPlant ScienceGeneral MedicineBiologyAsteraceaeAsteraceaebiology.organism_classificationPlant RootsSexual dimorphismColonisationPollinatorMycorrhizaeBotanySymbiosisEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsFinlandSoil MicrobiologyPlant biology (Stuttgart, Germany)
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Lasius niger ants discriminate aphids based on their cuticular hydrocarbons

2011

Mutualistic interactions between organisms depend on the ability of each partner to recognize the other. In ant–aphid mutualisms, ants have to recognize whether an aphid colony is worth tending. Many aphid species can live in mutualistic associations with ants (trophobiosis), whereas others are never tended and are frequently preyed upon by ants. Since aphids often produce low amounts of honeydew when not tended by ants, the ants should be able to recognize potential trophobionts based on signals other than honeydew. Conversely, aphids should signal if they are potential trophobionts. We investigated whether ants recognize potential trophobiont aphids based on their behaviour, morphological…

Mutualism (biology)HoneydewAphidbiologyLasiusBotanyAnimal Science and ZoologyTrophobiosisbiology.organism_classificationChemical communicationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsMyrmecophilyPredationAnimal Behaviour
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Rhythmicity of Intestinal IgA Responses Confers Oscillatory Commensal Microbiota Mutualism

2021

ABSTRACTMutualistic interactions with the commensal microbiota are enforced through a range of immune responses that confer metabolic benefits for the host and ensure tissue health and homeostasis. Immunoglobulin (Ig)A responses directly determine the composition of commensal species that colonize the intestinal tract but require significant metabolic resources to fuel antibody production by tissue-resident plasma cells. Here we demonstrate IgA responses are subject to diurnal regulation by dietary-derived metabolic cues and a cell-intrinsic circadian clock. Rhythmicity in IgA secretion conferred oscillatory patterns on the commensal microbial community and its associated metabolic activity…

Mutualism (biology)Immune systembiologyHost (biology)Circadian clockImmunologybiology.proteinSecretionCircadian rhythmAntibodyHomeostasis
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Aggressive mimicry coexists with mutualism in an aphid

2015

Understanding the evolutionary transition from interspecific exploitation to cooperation is a major challenge in evolutionary biology. Ant-aphid relationships represent an ideal system to this end because they encompass a coevolutionary continuum of interactions ranging from mutualism to antagonism. In this study, we report an unprecedented interaction along this continuum: aggressive mimicry in aphids. We show that two morphs clonally produced by the aphid Paracletus cimiciformis during its root-dwelling phase establish relationships with ants at opposite sides of the mutualism-antagonism continuum. Although one of these morphs exhibits the conventional trophobiotic (mutualistic) relations…

Mutualism (biology)Life Cycle StagesAphidMultidisciplinaryBase SequencebiologyAntsEcologyMolecular Sequence DataTetramoriumAnt mimicryBiological Sciencesbiology.organism_classificationGas Chromatography-Mass SpectrometryBroodPolyphenismPhylogeneticsEvolutionary biologyAphidsAggressive mimicryAnimalsSymbiosisPhylogeny
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The Microbiota: A Microbial Ecosystem Built on Mutualism Prevails

2019

Mutualism (biology)Microbial ecosystemHost Microbial InteractionsEcologyMicrobiotaAnimalsHumansImmunology and AllergyBiologySymbiosisIntroductory Journal ArticleJournal of Innate Immunity
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Under my wing: lesser kestrels and jackdaws derive reciprocal benefits in mixed-species colonies

2011

In mixed-species assemblages, antipredator benefits for a timid species nesting close to a more pugnacious one are often reported. Advantages for the protected species are usually manifested in terms of higher reproductive success than conspecifics nesting remote to the protector species. Whether the protector species also accrues any benefit remains untested, and the species-specific behavioral traits underlying enhanced reproductive output in mixed-species associations remain poorly documented. We studied associations between lesser kestrels (Falco naumanni) and jackdaws (Corvus monedula) nesting in rural buildings in the Gela Plain (Italy). We tested for interspecific interactions of jac…

Mutualism (biology)biologyReproductive successantipredator behavior Corvus monedula Falco naumanni information transfer interspecific interactions mutualism predator protection vigilance.EcologySettore BIO/05 - ZoologiaFalco naumanniInterspecific competitionbiology.organism_classificationPredationVigilance (behavioural ecology)NestAnimal Science and ZoologyPredatorEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsBehavioral Ecology
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Parabiotic ants: the costs and benefits of symbiosis

2014

1. Mutualisms are important drivers of co-evolution and speciation. However, they typically imply costs for one or both partners. Each partner consequently tries to maximise benefits and minimise costs. Mutualisms can therefore develop towards commensalism or parasitism if one partner fails to provide sufficient benefits. This is particularly likely in diffuse interactions, where multiple species can associate with each other. If costs and benefits of a species vary with the identity of the partner species, this may result in a geographical mosaic of co-evolution. 2. In the present study, inter-specific interactions in two parabiotic associations of ants were studied (Hymenoptera: Formicida…

Mutualism (biology)education.field_of_studyEcologyEcologyForagingPopulationParasitismHymenopteraBiologyCommensalismbiology.organism_classificationSymbiosisInsect ScienceeducationLocal adaptationEcological Entomology
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Interactions of fungi with other organisms.

2013

Living organisms establish complex networks of mutualistic and antagonistic interactions in nature, which impact strongly on their own survival and on the stability of the whole population. Fungi, in particular, can shape natural as well as man-managed ecosystems due to their ubiquitous occurrence and the range of interactions they establish with plants, animals and other microbes. This review describes some examples of mutualistic and antagonistic fungal interactions that are of particular interest for their ecological role, or because they can be exploited by man to improve plant health and/or productivity in sustainable agriculture and forestry.

Mutualism (biology)education.field_of_studyEcologyfungal interactionsPopulationfungifood and beveragesPlant ScienceBiologybiocontrol fungi; fungal interactionsmycorrhizal fungiMycorrhizal fungiSustainable agricultureSettore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E ApplicataBiocontrol fungi fungal interactions mycorrhizal fungiEcosystemBiocontrol fungieducationEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics
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Il mutualismo dei siciliani d'America

2013

Il saggio affronta i meccanismoi di integrazione sociale della prima emigrazione siciliana negli Stati Uniti

Mutualismo Sicilia emigrazioneSettore SPS/03 - Storia Delle Istituzioni Politiche
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