An evolutionarily stable strategy to colonize spatially extended habitats
Weirong Liu,
Jonas Cremer,
Dengjin Li,
Terence Hwa () and
Chenli Liu ()
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Weirong Liu: Chinese Academy of Sciences
Jonas Cremer: University of California San Diego
Dengjin Li: Chinese Academy of Sciences
Terence Hwa: University of California San Diego
Chenli Liu: Chinese Academy of Sciences
Nature, 2019, vol. 575, issue 7784, 664-668
Abstract:
Abstract The ability of a species to colonize newly available habitats is crucial to its overall fitness1–3. In general, motility and fast expansion are expected to be beneficial for colonization and hence for the fitness of an organism4–7. Here we apply an evolution protocol to investigate phenotypical requirements for colonizing habitats of different sizes during range expansion by chemotaxing bacteria8. Contrary to the intuitive expectation that faster is better, we show that there is an optimal expansion speed for a given habitat size. Our analysis showed that this effect arises from interactions among pioneering cells at the front of the expanding population, and revealed a simple, evolutionarily stable strategy for colonizing a habitat of a specific size: to expand at a speed given by the product of the growth rate and the habitat size. These results illustrate stability-to-invasion as a powerful principle for the selection of phenotypes in complex ecological processes.
Date: 2019
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DOI: 10.1038/s41586-019-1734-x
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