Population dynamics of generalist/specialist strategies in the feast-famine cycles
Rintaro Niimi, Chikara Furusawa, Yusuke Himeoka

TL;DR
This study introduces a mathematical model that combines resource-use and growth-death trade-offs, revealing how environmental fluctuations influence microbial generalist and specialist strategies.
Contribution
It presents a unified model incorporating growth-death and resource trade-offs, highlighting their combined effect on microbial strategy dominance in fluctuating environments.
Findings
High average growth rates favor generalists.
Strong growth-death trade-offs favor specialists.
Temporal nutrient fluctuations impact strategy prevalence.
Abstract
Microbial populations exhibit a broad spectrum of nutrient utilization strategies, ranging from strategies utilizing diverse nutrients, called "generalists," to those being highly adapted to specific nutrients, called "specialists." The mathematical conditions for the diversification of nutrient utilization strategies are central questions in theoretical ecology. Previous studies have shown that trade-offs among different resource utilization functions that cells cannot utilize broad types of substrates at near-maximum speed are crucial for the emergence of diverse strategies. However, in natural settings, nutrient availability often fluctuates over time, imposing additional trade-offs on cells. Cells that grow rapidly under nutrient-rich conditions will suffer a higher death rate under nutrient-poor conditions, creating a growth-death trade-off that intersects with the classical…
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