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      Mixed company: a framework for understanding the composition and organization of mixed‐species animal groups

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          Abstract

          ABSTRACT Mixed‐species animal groups (MSGs) are widely acknowledged to increase predator avoidance and foraging efficiency, among other benefits, and thereby increase participants' fitness. Diversity in MSG composition ranges from two to 70 species of very similar or completely different phenotypes. Yet consistency in organization is also observable in that one or a few species usually have disproportionate importance for MSG formation and/or maintenance. We propose a two‐dimensional framework for understanding this diversity and consistency, concentrating on the types of interactions possible between two individuals, usually of different species. One axis represents the similarity of benefit types traded between the individuals, while the second axis expresses asymmetry in the relative amount of benefits/costs accrued. Considering benefit types, one extreme represents the case of single‐species groups wherein all individuals obtain the same supplementary, group‐size‐related benefits, and the other extreme comprises associations of very different, but complementary species (e.g. one partner creates access to food while the other provides vigilance). The relevance of social information and the matching of activities (e.g. speed of movement) are highest for relationships on the supplementary side of this axis, but so is competition; relationships between species will occur at points along this gradient where the benefits outweigh the costs. Considering benefit amounts given or received, extreme asymmetry occurs when one species is exclusively a benefit provider and the other a benefit user. Within this parameter space, some MSG systems are constrained to one kind of interaction, such as shoals of fish of similar species or leader–follower interactions in fish and other taxa. Other MSGs, such as terrestrial bird flocks, can simultaneously include a variety of supplementary and complementary interactions. We review the benefits that species obtain across the diversity of MSG types, and argue that the degree and nature of asymmetry between benefit providers and users should be measured and not just assumed. We then discuss evolutionary shifts in MSG types, focusing on drivers towards similarity in group composition, and selection on benefit providers to enhance the benefits they can receive from other species. Finally, we conclude by considering how individual and collective behaviour in MSGs may influence both the structure and processes of communities.

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          Most cited references219

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          The evolution of cooperation.

          Cooperation in organisms, whether bacteria or primates, has been a difficulty for evolutionary theory since Darwin. On the assumption that interactions between pairs of individuals occur on a probabilistic basis, a model is developed based on the concept of an evolutionarily stable strategy in the context of the Prisoner's Dilemma game. Deductions from the model, and the results of a computer tournament show how cooperation based on reciprocity can get started in an asocial world, can thrive while interacting with a wide range of other strategies, and can resist invasion once fully established. Potential applications include specific aspects of territoriality, mating, and disease.
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            Biodiversity and Resilience of Ecosystem Functions.

            Accelerating rates of environmental change and the continued loss of global biodiversity threaten functions and services delivered by ecosystems. Much ecosystem monitoring and management is focused on the provision of ecosystem functions and services under current environmental conditions, yet this could lead to inappropriate management guidance and undervaluation of the importance of biodiversity. The maintenance of ecosystem functions and services under substantial predicted future environmental change (i.e., their 'resilience') is crucial. Here we identify a range of mechanisms underpinning the resilience of ecosystem functions across three ecological scales. Although potentially less important in the short term, biodiversity, encompassing variation from within species to across landscapes, may be crucial for the longer-term resilience of ecosystem functions and the services that they underpin.
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              The Assembly of Species Communities: Chance or Competition?

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Biological Reviews
                Biol Rev
                Wiley
                1464-7931
                1469-185X
                August 2020
                February 25 2020
                August 2020
                : 95
                : 4
                : 889-910
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Guangxi Key Laboratory for Forest Ecology and ConservationCollege of Forestry, Guangxi University Nanning Guangxi 530004 China
                [2 ]Centre for Ecological SciencesIndian Institute of Science Bengaluru Karnataka 560012 India
                [3 ]National Centre for Biological SciencesTata Institute of Fundamental Research Bangalore Karnataka 560012 India
                [4 ]Department of Wildlife Ecology and ConservationUniversity of Florida Gainesville FL 32611 U.S.A.
                [5 ]Departamento de Ciencias ForestalesUniversidad Nacional de Colombia Medellín 050034 Colombia
                [6 ]Department of Collective BehaviorMax Planck Institute of Animal Behavior, Universitätsstrasse 10 D‐78464 Konstanz Germany
                [7 ]Centre for the Advanced Study of Collective BehaviourUniversity of Konstanz D‐78464, Konstanz Germany
                [8 ]Department of BiologyUniversity of Konstanz D‐78464, Konstanz Germany
                [9 ]Deutsches PrimatenzentrumLeibniz‐Institut für Primatenforschung D‐37077, Göttingen Germany
                [10 ]Department of BiologyUniversity of Florida Gainesville FL 32611 U.S.A.
                [11 ]Florida Museum of Natural History Gainesville FL 32611 U.S.A.
                [12 ]Institute of Ecology and Earth Sciences, University of Tartu Tartu 51410 Estonia
                [13 ]Department of Zoology and Animal Ecology, Faculty of BiologyUniversity of Latvia Rīga 1004 Latvia
                [14 ]Department of Biological SciencesCalifornia State University Long Beach CA 90840 U.S.A.
                [15 ]Instituto de EcologiaUniversidad Mayor de San Andres La Paz 10077 Bolivia
                [16 ]Zoology Department and Biodiversity Research CenterUniversity of British Columbia Vancouver BC V6T 1ZA Canada
                [17 ]Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International AffairsPrinceton University Princeton NJ 08540 U.S.A.
                [18 ]Dakshin Foundation Bengaluru 560092 India
                Article
                10.1111/brv.12591
                bb446adc-db5b-49c6-9047-bbed9d1afb89
                © 2020

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

                History

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