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‘It’s nature calling to humans, and humans deciding whether or not to reply’: Why we need to start paying attention to our mutually beneficial relationships with other species

Nature is full of relationships: predator and prey, parasite and host, competitor versus competitor. But there is another, often-forgotten relationship that involves species working together for each other’s mutual benefit.

These relationships, called mutualisms, can be found across the natural world. For example, leaf-cutter ants collaborate with colonies of fungi they actively cultivate. Because leaf-cutter ants can’t digest plants themselves, they grow fungi in their nests and feed them leaf clippings. The fungi benefit from being actively fed, and the ants eat some fungi to access the plant nutrients. Neither species would survive without the other.

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