Evolution by natural selection tends to favors those that replicate faster to leave more offspring; nature, however, abounds with examples where organisms seem to 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 ~100% faster but pays a growth cost of ~10 % to make many copies of its flagellum. We analyzed a two-species model based on the Fisher equation to explain this observation: the rate of swarming expansion (v) results from an interplay of growth (r) and dispersal (D) and is independent of the carrying capacity: v=2sqrt(rD). A mutant can take o...
International audienceColonization and expansion into novel landscapes determine the distribution an...
The ability of a species to colonize newly available habitats is crucial to its overall fitness1-3. ...
Increased dispersal propensity often evolves on expanding range edges due to the Olympic Village eff...
Evolution by natural selection tends to favors those that replicate faster to leave more offspring; ...
International audiencePredicting the evolution of expanding populations is critical to controlling b...
Evolution by natural selection is commonly perceived as a process that favors those that replicate f...
Predicting the speed of biological invasions and native species migrations requires an understanding...
Colonization and expansion into novel landscapes determine the distribution and abundance of species...
Growth rate is increasingly recognised as a key life-history trait that may affect fitness directly,...
Predicting the speed of biological invasions and native species migrations requires an understanding...
Range expansions are central to two ecological issues reshaping patterns of global biodiversity: bio...
Range expansions and biological invasions are prime examples of transient processes that are likely ...
The speed at which biological range expansions occur has important consequences for species experien...
International audienceColonization and expansion into novel landscapes determine the distribution an...
The ability of a species to colonize newly available habitats is crucial to its overall fitness1-3. ...
Increased dispersal propensity often evolves on expanding range edges due to the Olympic Village eff...
Evolution by natural selection tends to favors those that replicate faster to leave more offspring; ...
International audiencePredicting the evolution of expanding populations is critical to controlling b...
Evolution by natural selection is commonly perceived as a process that favors those that replicate f...
Predicting the speed of biological invasions and native species migrations requires an understanding...
Colonization and expansion into novel landscapes determine the distribution and abundance of species...
Growth rate is increasingly recognised as a key life-history trait that may affect fitness directly,...
Predicting the speed of biological invasions and native species migrations requires an understanding...
Range expansions are central to two ecological issues reshaping patterns of global biodiversity: bio...
Range expansions and biological invasions are prime examples of transient processes that are likely ...
The speed at which biological range expansions occur has important consequences for species experien...
International audienceColonization and expansion into novel landscapes determine the distribution an...
The ability of a species to colonize newly available habitats is crucial to its overall fitness1-3. ...
Increased dispersal propensity often evolves on expanding range edges due to the Olympic Village eff...