Symbiosis

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]


An example of mutual symbiosis is the relationship between Ocellaris clownfish that dwell among the tentacles of Ritteri sea anemones. The territorial fish protects the anemone from anemone-eating fish, and in turn the stinging tentacles of the anemone protect the clownfish from its predators (a special mucus on the clownfish protects it from the stinging tentacles).[1]

Overview

The term symbiosis (from the Greek: συμ, sym, "with"; and βίοσίς, biosis, "living") commonly describes close and often long-term interactions between different biological species. The term was first used in 1879 by the German mycologist, Heinrich Anton de Bary, who defined it as: "the living together of unlike organisms".[2][3]

The definition of symbiosis is in flux and the term has been applied to a wide range of biological interactions. The symbiotic relationship may be categorized as being mutualistic, parasitic, or commensal in nature [4][5]. Others define it more narrowly, as only those relationships from which both organisms benefit, in which case it would be synonymous with mutualism.[6][7][8]

Symbiotic relationships included those associations in which one organisms lives on another (ectosymbiosis, such as mistletoe), or where one partner lives inside another (endosymbiosis, such as lactobacilli and other bacteria in humans or zooxanthelles in corals). Symbiotic relationships may be either obligate, i.e., necessary to the survival of at least one of the organisms involved, or facultative, where the relationship is beneficial but not essential to survival of the organisms. [9][10]

Physical interaction

A whole Alder tree root nodule.

Endosymbiosis is any symbiotic relationship in which the symbiote lives within the tissues of the host; either in the intracellular space or extracellularly.[11][12] Examples are nitrogen-fixing bacteria (called rhizobia) which live in root nodules on legume roots, Actinomycete nitrogen-bacteria called Frankia which live in Alder tree root nodules, single-celled algae inside reef-building corals, and bacterial endosymbionts that provide essential nutrients to about 10%–15% of insects.

Ectosymbiosis, also referred to as exosymbiosis, is any symbiotic relationship in which the symbiont lives on the body surface of the host, including the inner surface of the digestive tract or the ducts of exocrine glands.[13][14] Examples of this include ectoparasites such as lice, commensal ectosymbionts, such as the barnacles that attach themselves to the jaw of baleen whales, and mutualist ectosymbionts such as cleaner fish.


Mutualism

anemone hermit crab

The term Mutualism describes any relationship between individuals of different species where both individuals derive a fitness benefit.[15] Generally only lifelong interactions involving close physical and biochemical contact, can properly be considered symbiotic. Mutualistic relationships, may be either obligate for both species, obligate for one but facultative for the other, or facultative for both. Many biologists restrict the definition of symbiosis to close mutualist relationships.

A large percentage of herbivores have mutualistic gut fauna that help them digest plant matter, which is more difficult to digest than animal prey.[16] Coral reefs are the result of mutualisms between coral organisms and various types of algae that live inside them.[17] Most land plants and land ecosystems rely on mutualisms between the plants which fix carbon from the air, and Mycorrhyzal fungi which help in extracting minerals from the ground.[18]

Another example is the goby fish, which sometimes lives together with a shrimp. The shrimp digs and cleans up a burrow in the sand in which both the shrimp and the goby fish live. The shrimp is almost blind leaving it vulnerable to predators when above ground. In case of danger the goby fish touches the shrimp with its tail to warn it. When that happens both the shrimp and goby fish quickly retract into the burrow.[19]

One of the most spectacular examples of obligate mutualism is between the siboglinid tube worms and symbiotic bacteria that live at hydrothermal vents and cold seeps. The worm has no digestive tract and is solely reliant on their internal symbionts for nutrition. The bacteria oxidize either hydrogen sulfide or methane which the host supplies to them. These worms were discovered in the late 1980s at the hydrothermal vents near the Galapagos Islands and have since been found at deep-sea hydrothermal vents and cold seeps in all of the world's oceans.[20]

Commensalism

Commensalism describes a relationship between two living organisms where one benefits and the other is not significantly harmed or helped. It is derived from the English word commensal, meaning the sharing of food, and used of human social interaction. The word derives from the Latin com mensa, meaning sharing a table.[21][22]

Commensal relationships may involve an organism using another for transportation (phoresy), for housing (inquilinism), or it may also involve an organism using something another created, after the death of the first (metabiosis). An example is the hermit crabs that use gastropod shells to protect their bodies. Further examples include spiders building their webs on trees.

Parasitism

A parasitic relationship is one in which one member of the association benefits while the other is harmed.[23] Parasitic symbioses take many forms, from endoparasites that live within the host's body, to ectoparasites that live on its surface. In addition, parasites may be necrotrophic, which is to say they kill their host, or biotrophic, meaning they rely on their host surviving. Biotrophic parasitism is an extremely successful mode of life. Depending on the definition used, as many as half of all animals have at least one parasitic phase in their life cycles, and it is also frequent in plants and fungi. Moreover, almost all free-living animals are host to one or more parasite taxa.

Symbiosis and evolution

Leaf Hoppers protected by an army of meat ants

While historically, symbiosis has received less attention than other interactions such as predation or competition,[24] it is increasingly recognised as an important selective force behind evolution,[25][26] with many species having a long history of interdependent co-evolution.[27] In fact the evolution of all eukaryotes (plants, animals, fungi, protists) is believed to have resulted from a symbiosis between various sorts of bacteria.[28][29][30]

Symbiogenesis

The biologist Lynn Margulis, famous for the work on endosymbiosis, contends that symbiosis is a major driving force behind evolution. She considers Darwin's notion of evolution, driven by competition, as incomplete, and claims evolution is strongly based on co-operation, interaction, and mutual dependence among organisms. According to Margulis and Dorion Sagan, "Life did not take over the globe by combat, but by networking."[31]

Co-evolution

Symbiosis played a major role in the co-evolution of flowering plants and the animals that pollinate them. Many plants that are pollinated by insects, bats or birds, have very specialized flowers modified to promote pollination by a specific pollinator that is also correspondingly adapted. The first flowering plants in the fossil record had relatively simple flowers. Adaptive speciation quickly gave rise to many diverse groups of plants, and at the same time, corresponding speciation occurred in certain insects groups. Some groups of plants developed nectar and large sticky pollen while insects evolved more specialized morphologies to access and collect these rich food sources. In some taxa of plants and insects the relationship has become dependent,[32] where the plant species can only be pollinated by one species of insect. [33]

Objections

Creationists have long claimed that obligate symbioses are evidence against evolution, arguing that since neither organism can survive without the other, they must have come into existence at exactly the same time.[34] This point of view is countered in scientific claims by the extreme variety of symbiotic relationships as well the mutability of species over time: obligate mutualisms could have evolved from facultative relationships in which neither species is fully committed. Many examples of facultative symbioses and multiple theoretical and computational models describing how such a relationship would evolve do in fact exist.[35][36][37][38]

Notes

  1. Lee 2003
  2. Wilkinson 2001
  3. Douglas 1994, p. 1
  4. Dethlefsen L, McFall-Ngai M, Relman DA (2007). "An ecological and evolutionary perspective on human-microbe mutualism and disease". Nature. 449: 811–808. doi:10.1038/nature06245. PMID 17943117.
  5. Paszkowski U. (2006). "Mutualism and parasitism: the yin and yang of plant symbioses". Curr Opin Plant Biol. 9: 364–370. doi:10.1016/j.pbi.2006.05.008. PMID 16713732.
  6. Wilkinson 2001
  7. Isaac 1992, p. 266
  8. Saffo 1993
  9. Moran 2006
  10. Ahmadjian & Paracer 2000, p. 12
  11. Ahmadjian & Paracer 2000, p. 12
  12. Sapp 1994, p. 142
  13. Ahmadjian & Paracer 2000, p. 12
  14. Nardon & Charles 2002
  15. Ahmadjian & Paracer 2000, p. 6
  16. Moran 2006
  17. Toller, Rowan & Knowlton 2001
  18. Harrison 2005
  19. Facey, Helfman & Collette 1997
  20. Cordes 2005
  21. Ahmadjian & Paracer 2000, p. 6
  22. Nair 2005
  23. Ahmadjian & Paracer 2000, p. 7
  24. Townsend, Begon & Harper 1996
  25. Wernegreen 2004
  26. Moran 2006
  27. Ahmadjian & Paracer 2000, p. 3-4
  28. Brinkman 2002
  29. Golding & Gupta 1995
  30. Moran 2006
  31. Sagan & Margulis 1986
  32. Harrison 2002
  33. Danforth & Ascher 1997
  34. Isaak 2004
  35. Roughgarden 1975
  36. Powell 1992
  37. Weiblen 2002
  38. Boucher 1988

References

See also

External links


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