Don't ask "when is it coevolution?" - ask "how?"
- PMID: 41014223
- DOI: 10.1093/evolut/qpaf194
Don't ask "when is it coevolution?" - ask "how?"
Abstract
Coevolution has come to be widely understood as specific, simultaneous, reciprocal adaptation by pairs of interacting species. This strict-sense definition arose from a desire for conceptual clarity, but it has never reflected the much wider diversity of ways in which interacting species may shape each other's evolution. As a result, much of the literature on the evolutionary consequences of species interactions pays homage to the strict-sense definition while addressing some other form of coevolution. This tension suggests we should re-frame the key question in coevolution research, from "when is it coevolution?" to, rather, "how is it coevolution?". The result is not so much a definition of coevolution as a mission statement: We can describe how species coevolve by documenting the ways that each species shaped the other's genetic diversity over a shared history of interaction. Making this change shifts our focus from identifying case studies for a single, narrowly defined process to describing the many ways - specific and diffuse, simultaneous and stepwise, adaptive and non-adaptive - in which species evolve together.
Keywords: Geographic Mosaic Theory of Coevolution; coevolution; ecological opportunity; escape-and-radiate; species interactions.
© The Author(s) 2025. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Society for the Study of Evolution (SSE).
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Research Materials