No effect of intraspecific relatedness on public goods cooperation in a complex community
Citation:
O'Brien, S., Hesse, E., Luj?n, A., Hodgson, D.J., Gardner, A., Buckling, A., No effect of intraspecific relatedness on public goods cooperation in a complex community, Evolution, 72, 5, 2018, 1165-1173Download Item:

Abstract:
Many organisms—notably microbes—are embedded within complex communities where cooperative behaviors in the form of
excreted public goods can benefit other species. Under such circumstances, intraspecific interactions are likely to be less important
in driving the evolution of cooperation. We first illustrate this idea with a simple theoretical model, showing that relatedness—the
extent to which individuals with the same cooperative alleles interact with each other—has a reduced impact on the evolution
of cooperation when public goods are shared between species. We test this empirically using strain of Pseudomonas aeruginosa
that vary in their production of metal-chelating siderophores in copper contaminated compost (an interspecific public good). We
show that nonsiderophore producers grow poorly relative to producers under high relatedness, but this cost can be alleviated by
the presence of the isogenic producer (low relatedness) and/or the compost microbial community. Hence, relatedness can become
unimportant when public goods provide interspecific benefits.
Sponsor
Grant Number
Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)
NE/P001130/1)
Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)
NE/K009524/1
Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC)
BB/K003240/1
Author's Homepage:
http://people.tcd.ie/obries79Description:
PUBLISHED
Author: O'Brien, Siobhan
Type of material:
Journal ArticleCollections:
Series/Report no:
Evolution;72;
5;
Availability:
Full text availableKeywords:
Cooperation, microbial communities, Pseudomonas, public goods, siderophoresSubject (TCD):
Smart & Sustainable Planet , Evolutionary Biology , MICROBIOLOGY , Microbial ecologyLicences: