Tuesday, August 5, 2008: 8:00 AM
	102 A, Midwest Airlines Center
	
		
		
		
	Background/Question/Methods Mutualisms are interspecific interactions in which both players benefit. Explaining their maintenance is problematic, because cheaters should outcompete cooperative conspecifics leading to mutualism instability. A well-known mutualism involves monoecious figs (Ficus) pollinated by host-specific wasps (Agaonidae), whose larvae gall ovules in their ‘fruits’ (syconia). Female pollinating wasps enter receptive syconia and oviposit directly into Ficus ovules. Across Ficus species there is a widely documented segregation of pollinator galls in inner ovules, and seeds in outer ovules, near the fig wall. This pattern suggests that wasps avoid, or are prevented from ovipositing into, outer ovules, which safeguards seed production. However, the mechanisms preventing wasps from exploiting outer ovules remain unknown. Recent optimal foraging models predict that wasps should specialise on laying eggs in inner ovules, ignoring outer ovules, if their offspring gain much higher fitness when they develop in inner ovules. We conducted studies of Ficus rubiginosa at six field sites in Australia 
	