Evolution at the edge of expanding populations
Maxime Deforet, Carlos Carmona-Fontaine, Kirill S. Korolev, Joao B., Xavier

TL;DR
This paper derives a simple rule based on expansion rates that predicts when faster dispersing mutants can outcompete others in expanding populations, balancing growth costs and dispersal advantages.
Contribution
It introduces a model linking expansion rate to evolution, showing that the fastest dispersers can dominate despite growth costs, validated by experiments and simulations.
Findings
Expansion rate v=2√(rD) is key to invasion success.
Faster dispersers can dominate if their expansion rate exceeds others.
Results are consistent across experiments and simulations.
Abstract
Predicting evolution of expanding populations is critical to control biological threats such as invasive species and cancer metastasis. Expansion is primarily driven by reproduction and dispersal, but nature abounds with examples of evolution where organisms pay a reproductive cost to disperse faster. When does selection favor this 'survival of the fastest?' We searched for a simple rule, motivated by evolution experiments where swarming bacteria evolved into an hyperswarmer mutant which disperses faster but pays a growth cost of to make many copies of its flagellum. We analyzed a two-species model based on the Fisher equation to explain this observation: the population expansion rate () results from an interplay of growth () and dispersal () and is independent of the carrying capacity: . A mutant can take over the edge only if its…
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