The theory of games and microbe ecology
Journal article, 2019

Using game theory, we provide mathematical proof that if a species of asexually reproducing microbes is not characterized by maximum variability in competitive abilities among its individual organisms, then that species is vulnerable to replacement by competitors. Furthermore, we prove that such maximally variable species are neutral towards each other in competition for limited resources; they coexist. Our proof is constructive: given one species which does not possess maximum variability, we construct a second species with the same (or lower) mean competitive ability which can outcompete the first, in the sense that its expected value in competition is positive, whereas the expected value of the non-maximally variable species is negative. Our results point towards the mechanistic underpinnings for the frequent observations that (1) microbes are characterized by large intra-specific variability and that (2) the number of extant microbe species is very large.

Microbes

Fitness

Game theory

Ecology

Competition

Phenotypic variability

Author

Susanne Menden-Deuer

University of Rhode Island

Julie Rowlett

Chalmers, Mathematical Sciences, Analysis and Probability Theory

University of Gothenburg

Theoretical Ecology

1874-1738 (ISSN) 18741746 (eISSN)

Vol. 12 1 1-15

Subject Categories

Mathematics

Ecology

Biological Sciences

DOI

10.1007/s12080-018-0384-1

More information

Latest update

4/6/2022 5