Abstract

In intimate mutualisms between hosts and symbionts, selection can act repeatedly over the development times of the interacting individuals. Although much is now known about the overall ecological conditions that favor the evolution of mutualism, a current challenge is to understand how natural selection acts on the number and kinds of partners to shape the evolution and stability of these interactions. Using the obligate fig-fig wasp mutualism, our experiments showed that the proportion of figs developed to maturity increased quickly to 1.0 as the number of foundresses increased, regardless of whether the foundresses carried pollen. Selection against pollen-free wasps did not occur at this early stage in fig development. Within figs that developed, the proportion of galls producing adult wasps remained high as the number of pollen-carrying foundresses increases. In contrast, the proportion of galls producing adult wasps decreased as the number of pollen-free foundresses increased. Viable seed production increased as the number or proportion of pollen-carrying foundresses increased, but the average number of wasp offspring per pollen-carrying foundress was highest when she was the sole foundress. These results show that figs and their pollinator wasps differ in how fitness effects are distributed throughout the development of the interaction and depend on the number and proportion of pollen-carrying foundresses contributing to the interaction. These results suggest that temporal fluctuations in the local number and proportion of pollen-carrying wasps available to enter figs are likely to have strong but different effects on the figs and the wasps.

Highlights

  • Mutualisms between species often involve interactions with multiple partners that may interact with each other

  • The interactions between figs and fig wasps are among the most well-known and diverse mutualisms found in nature, and they have persisted for millions of years[24,25]

  • The number of seeds produced by the fig and the number of adult wasps emerging from the fig fruit depend on the subsequent sequence of life history events within the fig.[5,11,26,29]

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Summary

Introduction

Mutualisms between species often involve interactions with multiple partners that may interact with each other. The interactions between plants and pollinating floral parasites provide opportunities to evaluate how fitness in each participant is built up throughout the course of an interaction from the time of encounter to the production of seeds and the generation of adult pollinators. These interactions occupy a complex middle ground between intimate symbiotic mutualisms and mutualisms among free-living species. Each of those events provides an opportunity for selection to favor figs that have been entered by few or many fig wasps

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