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Allelopathy as an emergent, exploitable public good in the bloom-forming microalga Prymnesium parvum
- Publication Year :
- 2013
-
Abstract
- Many microbes cooperatively secrete extracellular products that favorably modify their environment. Consistent with social evolution theory, structured habitats play a role in maintaining these traits in microbial model systems, by localizing the benefits and separating strains that invest in these products from ‘cheater’ strains that benefit without paying the cost. It is thus surprising that many unicellular, well-mixed microalgal populations invest in extracellular toxins that confer ecological benefits upon the entire population, for example, by eliminating nutrient competitors (allelopathy). Here we test the hypotheses that microalgal exotoxins are (1) exploitable public goods that benefit all cells, regardless of investment, or (2) non-exploitable private goods involved in cell-level functions. We test these hypotheses with high-toxicity (TOX+) and low-toxicity (TOX-) strains of the damaging, mixotrophic microalga Prymnesium parvum and two common competitors: green algae and diatoms. TOX+ actually benefits from dense populations of competing green algae, which can also be prey for P. parvum, yielding a relative fitness advantage over coexisting TOX-. However, with non-prey competitors (diatoms), TOX- increases in frequency over TOX+, despite benefiting from the exclusion of diatoms by TOX+. An evolutionary unstable, ecologically devastating public good may emerge from traits selected at lower levels expressed in novel environments.
- Subjects :
- Population
Genetic Fitness
Exotoxins
Biology
Article
Predation
Evolution, Molecular
fluids and secretions
Genetics
Selection, Genetic
education
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Allelopathy
education.field_of_study
Ecology
fungi
Haptophyta
Public good
biology.organism_classification
Prymnesium parvum
bacteria
Green algae
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Mixotroph
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....2608cd27522d3b87dbc90930dbb3e6ee