2018
DOI: 10.1111/fwb.13205
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Mutualism or parasitism: Partner abundance affects host fitness in a fish reproductive interaction

Abstract: Mutualisms are ubiquitous in nature but are understudied in freshwater ecosystems. Mutualisms can be unstable, shifting to commensal or even negative outcomes with context. Quantifying context dependency in mutualisms is critical for understanding how biotic interactions will shift along disturbance gradients in freshwater systems. A common reproductive interaction among stream fishes, nest association occurs when individuals of one species spawn in nests constructed by a host fish. Hosts benefit from a diluti… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(28 citation statements)
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“…The fitness outcomes observed along a continuum of partner abundance are likely to differ between studies. Silknetter et al () identified parasitism at low partner abundances and mutualism at high abundances and this result is likely to be the result of novel resource trade; spawning substrate/parental care provided by the host in exchange for brood dilution. In contrast, Brown et al, () observed a mutualistic outcome at moderate partner densities but parasitism at high partner densities.…”
Section: Context Dependency In Positive Interactionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The fitness outcomes observed along a continuum of partner abundance are likely to differ between studies. Silknetter et al () identified parasitism at low partner abundances and mutualism at high abundances and this result is likely to be the result of novel resource trade; spawning substrate/parental care provided by the host in exchange for brood dilution. In contrast, Brown et al, () observed a mutualistic outcome at moderate partner densities but parasitism at high partner densities.…”
Section: Context Dependency In Positive Interactionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Stoll et al, ). The dashed black line indicates a relationship in which low symbiont densities are actually detrimental to the host, and do not benefit host fitness until a critical mass has been reached (sensu Silknetter et al, )…”
Section: Context Dependency In Positive Interactionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…However, theoretical works estimating negative (Ferriere et al 2002, Mougi and Kondoh 2014, Bachelot and Lee 2020 and neutral (Arizmendi et al 1996, Bronstein 2001) effects also exist, showcasing a presumable role for context-dependence in the diversity of community assemblages. The body of empirical research evaluating the role of community-interactions on mutualism fitness is limited, but growing (Bronstein 1991, Thompson and Fernandez 2006, Silknetter et al 2018, Song et al 2020. One impediment to investigating the effects of community-level antagonism on mutualism fitness is that lifetime fitness in many systems is difficult to quantify (West et al 1996, Bronstein 2001.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…the environment in which the interaction occurs) factors at the time of the interaction (Bronstein, 1994). Understanding context dependency in biotic interactions is key to predicting species response to environmental change (Chamberlain, Bronstein, & Rudgers, 2014), and a growing body of research is identifying the role of context dependency in freshwater systems (Brown et al, 2012;Peoples & Frimpong, 2016b;Silknetter et al, 2018). Moreover, a key debate in the general ecology literature centres on whether facilitation is necessary in benign habitats or is only relevant in stressful habitats (Holmgren & Scheffer, 2010).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%