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Judith L. Bronstein

Researcher at University of Arizona

Publications -  163
Citations -  11053

Judith L. Bronstein is an academic researcher from University of Arizona. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mutualism (biology) & Pollinator. The author has an hindex of 53, co-authored 150 publications receiving 9849 citations. Previous affiliations of Judith L. Bronstein include International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis & University of Miami.

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Conditional outcomes in mutualistic interactions

TL;DR: Interspecific interactions are traditionally displayed in a grid in which each interaction is placed according to its outcome, but the full range of natural outcomes may reveal far more about its ecological and evolutionary dynamics than does the average outcome at a given place and time.
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Our Current Understanding of Mutualism

TL;DR: The recent primary literature is reviewed in order to assess quentitatively the frequency of studies of mutualism, the types of questions they address, and their general scientific approach, and eight research questions whose answers have the potential to reveal broad-based generalizations about the evolution and ecology of Mutualism.
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How context dependent are species interactions

TL;DR: Meta-analysis is used to quantify variation in species interaction outcomes (competition, mutualism, or predation) for 247 published articles and urges that studying context dependency per se can provide a general method for describing patterns of variation in nature.
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Mutualisms in a changing world: an evolutionary perspective

TL;DR: An evolutionary perspective on mutualism breakdown is developed to complement the ecological perspective, by focusing on three processes: shifts from mutualism to antagonism, switches to novel partners and mutualism abandonment.
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The exploitation of mutualisms

TL;DR: It is argued that the idea of a “temptation to defect” that generates a destabilizing conflict of interest between partners is in fact rather inappropriate for interpreting most observed forms of exploitation in mutualisms.