Modelling interactions in fungi
Authored by John W Crawford, Ruth E Falconer, James L Bown, Nia A White
Date Published: 2008
DOI: 10.1098/rsif.2007.1210
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Abstract
Indeterminate organisms have received comparatively little attention in
theoretical ecology and still there is much to be understood about the
origins and consequences of community structure. The fungi comprise an
entire kingdom of life and epitomize the indeterminate growth form.
While interactions play a significant role in shaping the community
structure of indeterminate organisms, to date most of our knowledge
relating to fungi comes from observing interaction outcomes between two
species in two-dimensional arena experiments. Interactions in the
natural environment are more complex and further insight will benefit
from a closer integration of theory and experiment. This requires a
modelling framework capable of linking genotype and environment to
community structure and function. Towards this, we present a theoretical
model that replicates observed interaction outcomes between fungal
colonies. The hypotheses underlying the model propose that interaction
outcome is an emergent consequence of simple and highly localized
processes governing rates of uptake and remobilization of resources, the
metabolic cost of production of antagonistic compounds and non-localized
transport of internal resources. The model may be used to study systems
of many interacting colonies and so provides a platform upon which the
links between individual-scale behaviour and community-scale function in
complex environments can be built.
Tags
behavior
Diversity
networks
Autophagy
Community
patterns
Consequences
Nitrogen
Mycelial interactions
Wood