Holobionts are entities comprised of the host and all of its symbiotic microbes, including those which affect the holobiont’s phenotype and have coevolved with the host (blue), those which affect the holobiont’s phenotype but have not coevolved with the host (red), and those which do not affect the holobiont’s phenotype at all (gray). Microbes may be transmitted vertically or horizontally, may be acquired from the environment, and can be constant or inconstant in the host. Therefore, holobiont phenotypes can change in time and space as microbes come into and out of the holobiont. Microbes in the environment are not part of the holobiont (white). Hologenomes then encompass the genomes of the host and all of its microbes at any given time point, with individual genomes and genes falling into the same three functional categories of blue, red, and gray. Holobionts and hologenomes are entities, whereas coevolution or the evolution of host-symbiont interactions are processes.