| Literature DB >> 24219572 |
Rolf Kümmerli1, Adin Ross-Gillespie.
Abstract
Over the past decade, there has been enormous interest in understanding the great diversity of microbial cooperative behaviors, including communication, group-based swarming, fruiting-body formation, and the secretion of group-beneficial enzymes and food-scavenging molecules. Zhang and Rainey, henceforth Z&R, recently contended that sociomicrobiologists have been overzealous in their casting of microbes as inherently social organisms, and too hasty in interpreting microbial behaviors in a social evolutionary framework. This challenge accompanied a set of experiments in which they revisited one of the best-studied social behaviors in bacteria-the production of diffusible, sharable iron-scavenging siderophore molecules. Z&R posit that their findings challenge the view that siderophore production is a cooperative trait. Here, we demonstrate that their arguments are flawed, and stem from both technical mistakes and misunderstandings of social evolution theory.Entities:
Keywords: Cheating; environmental conditions; maladaptation; public goods cooperation; siderophore; social evolution theory
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24219572 DOI: 10.1111/evo.12311
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evolution ISSN: 0014-3820 Impact factor: 3.694