Author
Cropp, R
Norbury, J
Journal title
Bulletin of Mathematical Biology
DOI
10.1007/s11538-018-0508-1
Last updated
2023-12-17T10:38:33.817+00:00
Abstract
<p style="text-align:justify;"> Pollination interactions are common, and their maintenance is critical for many food crops upon which human populations depend. Pollination is a mutualism interaction; together with predation and competition, mutualism makes up the triumvirate of fundamental interactions that control population dynamics. Here we examine pollination interactions (nectar reward for gamete transport service) using a simple heuristic model similar to the Lotka–Volterra models that have underpinned our understanding of predation and competition so effectively since the 1920s. We use a genetic algorithm to simulate the eco-evolutionary interactions of the plant and pollinator populations and examine the distributions of the parameter values and zero isoclines to infer the relative ubiquity of the various eco-evolutionary outcomes possible in the model. Our results suggest that trade-offs between costs and benefits for the pollinator may be a key component of obligate pollination systems in achieving adaptive success creating and stably occupying mutualist niches. </p>
Symplectic ID
920329
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Publication type
Journal Article
Publication date
12 Sep 2018
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