Spatial population genetics with fluid flow
Roberto Benzi, David R. Nelson, Suraj Shankar, Federico Toschi,, Xiaojue Zhu

TL;DR
This paper reviews how fluid flows influence microbial population genetics, demonstrating that flow dynamics can significantly affect competition, fixation, and evolutionary strategies in spatially extended microbial communities.
Contribution
It introduces analytical models and simulations to understand the impact of various fluid flow geometries on microbial genetic competition and evolution.
Findings
Flow shear and compressibility affect genetic fixation.
Flow geometries influence genetic drop stability.
Fluid flows enable novel evolutionary strategies.
Abstract
The growth and evolution of microbial populations is often subjected to advection by fluid flows in spatially extended environments, with immediate consequences for questions of spatial population genetics in marine ecology, planktonic diversity and origin of life scenarios. Here, we review recent progress made in understanding this rich problem in the simplified setting of two competing genetic microbial strains subjected to fluid flows. As a pedagogical example we focus on antagonsim, i.e., two killer microorganism strains, each secreting toxins that impede the growth of their competitors (competitive exclusion), in the presence of stationary fluid flows. By solving two coupled reaction-diffusion equations that include advection by simple steady cellular flows composed of characteristic flow motifs in two dimensions (2d), we show how local flow shear and compressibility effects can…
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