Rock, paper, toxins
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Reichenbach

In many ecosystems, several competing species coexist because none is best at everything. Tobias Reichenbach of the Ludwig Maximilian University in Munich and his colleagues ran computer simulations of three virtual bacteria species fighting a sort of rock-paper-scissors game.

One species produces a toxin. A second is immune to the toxin and outcompetes the first. A third species is sensitive to the toxin but can overtake the second species because it's unburdened by the metabolic cost of producing an antidote. Each virtual population, shown here in a different color, propagates in waves as it pushes aside its weaker competitor while being chased by the stronger one, the researchers explain in an upcoming Physical Review Letters. Scientists have observed similar patterns among certain marine organisms.


Found in: Physics
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Suggested Reading:
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  • Buss, L.W. 1980. Competitive intransitivity and size-frequency distributions of interacting populations. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 77(September):5355.

    Frean, M. 2001. Rock-scissors-paper and the survival of the weakest. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 268(July 7):1323.
Citations & References:
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  • Tobias Reichenbach
    Arnold Sommerfeld Center for Theoretical Physics
    Department of Physics
    Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
    Theresienstrasse 37
    D-80333 München
    Germany