Cooperative symbionts enable their hosts to exploit a diversity of environments. A low genetic diversity (high relatedness) between the symbionts within a host is thought to favour cooperation by reducing conflict within the host. However, hosts will not be favoured to transmit their symbionts (or commensals) in costly ways that increase relatedness, unless this also provides an immediate fitness benefit to the host. We suggest that conditionally expressed costly competitive traits, such as antimicrobial warfare with bacteriocins, could provide a relatively universal reason for why hosts would gain an immediate benefit from increasing the relatedness between symbionts. We theoretically test this hypothesis with a simple illustrative model that examines whether hosts should manipulate relatedness, and an individual-based simulation, where host control evolves in a structured population. We find that hosts can be favoured to manipulate relatedness, to reduce conflict between commensals via this immediate reduction in warfare. Furthermore, this manipulation evolves to extremes of high or low vertical transmission and only in a narrow range is partly vertical transmission stable.
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Amer Museum Nat Hist, Dept Invertebrates, New York, NY 10024 USA
CUNY City Coll, Dept Biol, New York, NY 10031 USAAmer Museum Nat Hist, Dept Invertebrates, New York, NY 10024 USA
Lee, John J.
Cervasco, Megan H.
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Amer Museum Nat Hist, Dept Invertebrates, New York, NY 10024 USA
CUNY City Coll, Dept Biol, New York, NY 10031 USAAmer Museum Nat Hist, Dept Invertebrates, New York, NY 10024 USA
Cervasco, Megan H.
Morales, Jorge
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CUNY City Coll, Cent Elect Microscope Facil, New York, NY 10031 USAAmer Museum Nat Hist, Dept Invertebrates, New York, NY 10024 USA
Morales, Jorge
Billik, Morgan
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CUNY City Coll, Dept Biol, New York, NY 10031 USAAmer Museum Nat Hist, Dept Invertebrates, New York, NY 10024 USA