“…The cost/benefit analysis of these interactions is never simple, as associations between organisms do not evolve in isolation, but rather within a complex ecological context, where third parties—such as copollinators, exploiters, predators, or parasites—may play an important role modifying the plant–insect interaction (Bronstein, Wilson, & Morris, 2003; Gomulkiewicz, Nuismer, & Thompson, 2003; Harrison, 2014; Holland & Fleming, 2002; Schatz, Magali, Rakhi, Borges, & Hossaert‐McKey, 2006; Scopece, Campese, Duffy, & Cozzolino, 2018). This means that the net outcome of the interaction may change from a mutualism to an antagonism or commensalism in a reversible fashion depending on the specific environment in which the interaction occurs (Bronstein, 1994; Bronstein, Alarcon, & Geber, 2006; Dufaÿ & Anstett, 2003; Pellmyr, 1989; Pellmyr et al, 1996; Thompson & Cunningham, 2002; Thompson & Fernandez, 2006; Thompson & Pellmyr, 1992; Westerbergh, 2004; Westerbergh & Westerbergh, 2001).…”