Why fruit rots: theoretical support for Janzen's theory of microbe–macrobe competition

Author:

Ruxton Graeme D.1,Wilkinson David M.2,Schaefer H. Martin3,Sherratt Thomas N.4

Affiliation:

1. School of Biology, University of St Andrews, St Andrews KY16 9TH, UK

2. Biology and Earth sciences, Liverpool John Moores University, Liverpool L3 3AF, UK

3. Department of Evolutionary Biology and Animal Ecology, Faculty of Biology, University of Freiburg, Hauptstrasse 1, Freiburg 79104, Germany

4. Department of Biology, Carleton University, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K1S 5B6

Abstract

We present a formal model of Janzen's influential theory that competition for resources between microbes and vertebrates causes microbes to be selected to make these resources unpalatable to vertebrates. That is, fruit rots, seeds mould and meat spoils, in part, because microbes gain a selective advantage if they can alter the properties of these resources to avoid losing the resources to vertebrate consumers. A previous model had failed to find circumstances in which such a costly spoilage trait could flourish; here, we present a simple analytic model of a general situation where costly microbial spoilage is selected and persists. We argue that the key difference between the two models lies in their treatments of microbial dispersal. If microbial dispersal is sufficiently spatially constrained that different resource items can have differing microbial communities, then spoilage will be selected; however, if microbial dispersal has a strong homogenizing effect on the microbial community then spoilage will not be selected. We suspect that both regimes will exist in the natural world, and suggest how future empirical studies could explore the influence of microbial dispersal on spoilage.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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