Publication | Closed Access
Ecological and Evolutionary Consequences of Multispecies Plant-Animal Interactions
570
Citations
170
References
2004
Year
BiologySpecie InteractionMolecular EcologyDiffuse CoevolutionMultiple InteractionsNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyPairwise InteractionsPlant-animal InteractionMutualistic InteractionPopulation GeneticsBiotic InteractionEvolutionary Consequences
▪ Abstract Ecologists and evolutionary biologists are broadly interested in how the interactions among organisms influence their abundance, distribution, phenotypes, and genotypic composition. Recently, we have seen a growing appreciation of how multispecies interactions can act synergistically or antagonistically to alter the ecological and evolutionary outcomes of interactions in ways that differ fundamentally from outcomes predicted by pairwise interactions. Here, we review the evidence for criteria identified to detect community-based, diffuse coevolution. These criteria include (a) the presence of genetic correlations between traits involved in multiple interactions, (b) interactions with one species that alter the likelihood or intensity of interactions with other species, and (c) nonadditive combined effects of multiple interactors. In addition, we review the evidence that multispecies interactions have demographic consequences for populations, as well as evolutionary consequences. Finally, we explore the experimental and analytical techniques, and their limitations, used in the study of multispecies interactions. Throughout, we discuss areas in particular need of future research.
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