Publication | Open Access
Sustainability of Virulence in a Phage-Bacterial Ecosystem
74
Citations
23
References
2010
Year
BiologyPathogenic MicrobiologyMedicineNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyPhage PredatorsPredator-prey InteractionBacteriophagePhage BiologyIntraguild PredationMicrobial EcologyInterspecific Behavioral InteractionEnvironmental MicrobiologyMicrobiologyVirulent PhagesPhage-bacterial EcosystemBiotic Interaction
Virulent phages and their bacterial hosts represent an unusual sort of predator-prey system where each time a prey is eaten, hundreds of new predators are born. It is puzzling how, despite the apparent effectiveness of the phage predators, they manage to avoid driving their bacterial prey to extinction. Here we consider a phage-bacterial ecosystem on a two-dimensional (2-d) surface and show that homogeneous space in itself enhances coexistence. We analyze different behavioral mechanisms that can facilitate coexistence in a spatial environment. For example, we find that when the latent times of the phage are allowed to evolve, selection favors "mediocre killers," since voracious phage rapidly deplete local resources and go extinct. Our model system thus emphasizes the differences between short-term proliferation and long-term ecosystem sustainability.
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