Modeling population patterns of chemotactic bacteria in homogeneous porous media
Authored by Florian Centler, Martin Thullner, Ingo Fetzer
Date Published: 2011
DOI: 10.1016/j.jtbi.2011.07.024
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Abstract
The spatio-temporal distribution of subsurface microorganisms determines
their efficiency in providing essential ecosystem services such as the
degradation of organic matter, the remineralization of carbon and
nitrogen, or the remediation of anthropogenic contaminants. Populations
of motile, chemotactic bacteria have been shown to be capable of pattern
formation even in the absence of environmental heterogeneities. Focusing
on the water saturated domain of the subsurface (e.g., aquatic
sediments, porous aquifers), we analyze this innate capability of
bacterial populations in an idealized model of a homogeneous, saturated
porous medium. Considering a linear array of connected, identical
micro-habitats populated by motile, chemotactic bacterial cells, we
identify prerequisites for pattern formation, analyze types of patterns, and assess their impact on substrate utilization. In our model, substrate supplied to the microhabitats facilitates bacterial growth, and microbial cells can migrate between neighboring microhabitats due to
(i) random motility, (ii) chemotaxis towards substrate, and (iii)
self-attraction. A precondition for inhomogeneous population patterns is
analytically derived, stating that patterns are possible if the
self-attraction exceeds a threshold defined by the random motility and
the steady state population density in the microhabitats. An
individual-based implementation of the model shows that static and
dynamic population patterns can unfold. Degradation efficiency is
highest for homogeneous bacterial distributions and decreases as pattern
formation commences. If during biostimulation efforts the carrying
capacity of the microhabitats is successively increased, simulation
results show that degradation efficiency can unexpectedly decrease when
the pattern formation threshold is crossed. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All
rights reserved.
Tags
Dynamics
Distributions
Aggregation
growth
System
Escherichia-coli
Degradation
Spatial-distribution
Motility
Soil