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Coevolution

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

An ant from the Pseudomyrmex species perched on a Bull Thorn Acacia tree in Belize. These ants protect the tree by living in its thorns and eating anything that tries to harm the leaves.

Coevolution is an interesting idea in biology. It happens when two or more species affect each other's evolution through natural selection. For example, plants and the insects that visit their flowers can change together over time.

Charles Darwin talked about this idea in his book On the Origin of Species from 1859. He used the word coadaptation to describe how plants and insects might evolve together. Later scientists found more examples.

The pollinating wasp Dasyscolia ciliata in pseudocopulation with a flower of Ophrys speculum

Since the 1960s, scientists have studied coevolution more. They have seen it in many places, such as between acacia trees and ants, or between plants and butterflies. Coevolution can help explain big changes in how species live and evolve.

In coevolution, each species affects the other, shaping how they change over time. This can happen in many ways, such as between partners that help each other, or between animals that hunt and their prey. Sometimes many species are involved, all influencing each other.

Although coevolution is a biology idea, people have used it to think about other areas too, like computer science, sociology, and even astronomy.

Mutualism

Main article: Mutualism (biology)

Coevolution is when two or more species change together because they affect each other. This can create a close relationship where both benefit, called mutualism. There are many types of these relationships.

Honey bee taking a reward of nectar and collecting pollen in its pollen baskets from white melilot flowers

Flowering plants appeared a long time ago, and Charles Darwin thought coevolution might explain how they changed so fast. He first talked about it in On the Origin of Species.

Modern insect-pollinated (entomophilous) flowers work closely with insects. They have changed together for over 100 million years. Insects like Hymenoptera (wasps, bees, and ants), Lepidoptera (butterflies and moths), Diptera (flies), and Coleoptera (beetles) all evolved with flowering plants during the Cretaceous time.

Flowers use scent, patterns, and colors to attract insects. Some flowers even look like insects. For example, the yucca plant is pollinated only by a special yucca moth. The moth eats the plant's seeds but also carries pollen from one flower to another. The plant gives the moth a safe place to lay eggs.

Purple-throated carib feeding from and pollinating a flower

Hummingbirds and flowers that attract birds, called ornithophilous flowers, also have a close relationship. The flowers have nectar that birds like, colors that birds can see well, and shapes that fit birds' beaks.

The genus Ficus, which includes fig trees, has a special relationship with fig wasps. Each type of fig has its own wasp that pollinates it, and they depend on each other.

The acacia ant protects certain acacia trees from harmful insects. The tree gives the ants food and a place to live. However, not all ants help the trees in the same way.

Hosts and parasites

Main article: Host–parasite coevolution

Host–parasite coevolution is when a host and a parasite change each other over time. Many viruses need hosts to live, and they have changed along with their hosts. This creates a race where both must keep changing to survive. This idea is called the Red Queen hypothesis, named after a character who says you must keep moving just to stay in the same place. Having many babies helps hosts stay safe by making some babies able to resist infection.

Brood parasitism shows another kind of coevolution. For example, some cuckoos lay their eggs in the nests of other birds. The cuckoo eggs look like the host's eggs, but hosts try to notice the difference. Cuckoos have evolved tricks like thicker eggshells to protect their young.

Antagonistic coevolution can be seen in some ant species. Queens cannot make worker ants by mating with their own species but can by mating with another species. This creates a mix of both good and bad effects, as the colonies need these hybrids to survive.

Predators and prey

Main article: Predation

Predators and their prey change together over time. The predator tries to catch the prey, and the prey tries to escape. This back-and-forth makes both change. Often, this leads to a race where each side gets better at attacking or defending.

This same idea also works with animals that eat plants and the plants themselves. Scientists Paul R. Ehrlich and Peter H. Raven talked about how plants and butterflies change together. In the Rocky Mountains, red squirrels and crossbills (birds that eat seeds) both compete with lodgepole pine trees for seeds. Where squirrels are, the pine cones are heavier with fewer seeds and thinner scales, making it harder for squirrels to get the seeds. Where only crossbills are around, the cones are lighter but have thicker scales, making it harder for the birds to get to the seeds. The pine cones and these animals keep changing in response to each other.

Competition

Main articles: Intraspecific competition and Interspecific competition

When two groups of living things, whether they are the same kind or different kinds, compete, it can change how they develop over time. This change is called coevolution.

For example, in some insects, males and females have different goals during mating. This can create a situation where each tries to improve its own success, even if it affects the other.

Multispecies

Long-tongued bees and long-tubed flowers coevolved, whether pairwise or "diffusely" in groups known as guilds.

We've learned that coevolution often happens between two species. But sometimes, many species evolve together because of each other. This is called guild or diffuse coevolution.

For example, many flowering plants make nectar at the end of a long tube. This happened together with insects like bees, flies, and beetles that have long mouthparts to reach that nectar. These insects and plants all change each other’s evolution, forming a group of species that help one another.

Geographic mosaic theory

Main article: Mosaic coevolution

Mosaic coevolution is a theory about how animals and plants in different places change together over time. It says that where animals and plants live, and what other plants and animals are nearby, can shape how they change. These changes can happen in groups of animals or plants that are far apart.

Sometimes, these changes help both animals and plants, like when bees help flowers make seeds. Other times, one group may have a harder time because of changes in the other group. This can lead to a race where each group keeps changing to stay ahead. Some places have strong changes happening, while others have little or no change. These changes are influenced by where the animals and plants live and how they move and mix with others.

Outside biology

Coevolution is mostly an idea from biology, but people also use it in other areas by comparing it to other things.

In computer programs, coevolutionary methods help create artificial life and improve learning in games and machines. Famous inventors like Daniel Hillis and Karl Sims used these ideas to make better systems and virtual creatures.

Some scientists think that big space objects like black holes and galaxies grow together in a way that is similar to how living things change together.

In business and groups, coevolution looks at how companies and their partners shape each other. For example, Intel works with other companies, and both change because of this work.

Scholars also use coevolution to study how economies, societies, and the environment affect each other. Books like The Emergence of Organizations and Markets and How China Escaped the Poverty Trap show how different parts of a country or system change together over time.

In making computers, software and hardware depend on each other. When one part changes, the other changes too. This idea helps people understand how problems and solutions change together when they are being designed.

Images

A fig tree showing its tiny seed-bearing structures, which are part of its natural fruit.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Coevolution, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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