There is strong evidence that natural selection can favour phenotypic plasticity as a mechanism to maximize fitness in animals. Here, we aim to investigate phenotypic plasticity of a cooperative trait in bacteria--the production of an iron-scavenging molecule (pyoverdin) by Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Pyoverdin production is metabolically costly to the individual cell, but provides a benefit to the local group and can potentially be exploited by nonpyoverdin-producing cheats. Here, we subject bacteria to changes in the social environment in media with different iron availabilities and test whether cells can adjust pyoverdin production in response to these changes. We found that pyoverdin production per cell significantly decreased at higher cel...
Bacteria produce a wide variety of exoproducts that favourably modify their environment and increase...
The production of beneficial public goods is common in the microbial world, and so is cheating – the...
Bacteria perform cooperative behaviors that are exploitable by noncooperative cheats, and cheats fre...
There is growing awareness of the importance of cooperative behaviours in microbial communities. Emp...
Bacteria often cooperate by secreting molecules that can be shared as public goods between cells. Be...
There is growing awareness of the importance of cooperative behaviours in microbial communities. Emp...
Abstract Background A common form of cooperation in bacteria is based on the secretion of beneficial...
The idea that bacteria are social is a popular concept with implications for understanding the ecolo...
Phenotypic plasticity in response to competition is a well‐described phenomenon in higher organisms....
Bacteria are social organisms. Although they are prokaryotes, they exhibit social behaviours that ca...
Phenotypic plasticity in response to competition is a well-described phenomenon in higher organisms....
The production of beneficial public goods is common in the microbial world, and so is cheating--the ...
Public goods cooperation is common in microbes, and there is much interest in understanding how such...
Bacteria produce a wide variety of exoproducts that favourably modify their environment and increase...
The production of beneficial public goods is common in the microbial world, and so is cheating – the...
Bacteria perform cooperative behaviors that are exploitable by noncooperative cheats, and cheats fre...
There is growing awareness of the importance of cooperative behaviours in microbial communities. Emp...
Bacteria often cooperate by secreting molecules that can be shared as public goods between cells. Be...
There is growing awareness of the importance of cooperative behaviours in microbial communities. Emp...
Abstract Background A common form of cooperation in bacteria is based on the secretion of beneficial...
The idea that bacteria are social is a popular concept with implications for understanding the ecolo...
Phenotypic plasticity in response to competition is a well‐described phenomenon in higher organisms....
Bacteria are social organisms. Although they are prokaryotes, they exhibit social behaviours that ca...
Phenotypic plasticity in response to competition is a well-described phenomenon in higher organisms....
The production of beneficial public goods is common in the microbial world, and so is cheating--the ...
Public goods cooperation is common in microbes, and there is much interest in understanding how such...
Bacteria produce a wide variety of exoproducts that favourably modify their environment and increase...
The production of beneficial public goods is common in the microbial world, and so is cheating – the...
Bacteria perform cooperative behaviors that are exploitable by noncooperative cheats, and cheats fre...