Spatial controls on eco-evolutionary processes in microbial communities
Microorganisms are the most biodiverse life forms on our planet, yet we know little about the spatial processes underlying their ecology and evolution. Here, we highlight the importance of two spatial processes that act on individual cells – spatial intermixing of different populations and mechanica...
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Zusammenfassung: | Microorganisms are the most biodiverse life forms on our planet, yet we
know little about the spatial processes underlying their ecology and
evolution. Here, we highlight the importance of two spatial processes that
act on individual cells – spatial intermixing of different populations and
mechanical cell shoving during growth – to improve our understanding of
microbial eco-evolutionary dynamics. Using an individual-based model, we
show that the coexistence between slow- and fast-growing populations
becomes highly constrained under two conditions: when the slow- and
fast-growing populations are highly spatially intermixed and when the
ability to shove other cells (both conspecific and heterospecific) is
weak. The potential for evolution through plasmid-mediated horizontal gene
transfer between slow- and fast- growing populations also becomes
restricted in the same scenario. Our modeling highlights that ecological
constraints can dampen evolutionary opportunities within microbial
communities due to variation in spatial intermixing and mechanical shoving
at the cellular scale. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.h18931zqj |