What form of evolution exists between leafcutter ants and fungus? Please help!!!?

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Explain how each species in this pair benefits from this form of evolution.
Thanks!
 
Co-evolution.

Here's the abstract for an original paper:

Annu Rev Microbiol. 2001;55:357-80.

A community of ants, fungi, and bacteria: a multilateral approach to studying symbiosis.

Currie CR.
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, 2041 Haworth Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 66045-7534, USA. [email protected]

The ancient and highly evolved mutualism between fungus-growing ants and their fungi is a textbook example of symbiosis. The ants carefully tend the fungus, which serves as their main food source, and traditionally are believed to be so successful at fungal cultivation that they are able to maintain the fungus free of microbial pathogens. This assumption is surprising in light of theories on the evolution of parasitism, especially for those species of ants that have been clonally propagating their cultivars for millions of years. Recent work has established that, as theoretically predicted, the gardens of fungus-growing ants are host to a specialized, virulent, and highly evolved fungal pathogen in the genus Escovopsis. In addition, the ants have evolved a mutualistic association with filamentous bacteria (actinomycetes) that produce antibiotics that suppress the growth of Escovopsis. Thus, the attine symbiosis appears to be a coevolutionary "arms race" between the garden parasite Escovopsis on the one hand and the ant-fungus-actinomycete tripartite mutualism on the other. These recent findings indicate that microbes may be key components in the regulation of other symbiotic associations between higher organisms.
 
Leafcutter ans and the fungus which they "farm" have a form of symbiosis called "mutualism" (as opposed to parasitism or commensalism).

The ant gains a benefit because it gets a source of nutrition, and the fungus benefits because the ants help it grow and protect it from harmful conditions.

They have co-evolved together in this relationship - so it is "co-evolution".
 
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