Microbial populations hardly ever grow logistically and never sublinearly
View/ Open
Date
2025-04-01Estado
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
We investigate the growth dynamics of microbial populations, challenging the conventional logistic model.By analyzing empirical data from various biomes, we demonstrate that microbial growth is better described by a generalized logistic model, the θ-logistic model. This accounts for different growth mechanisms and environmental fluctuations, leading to a generalized gamma distribution of abundance fluctuations. Our findings reveal that microbial growth is never sublinear, so they cannot endorse—at least in the microbial world—the recent proposal of this mechanism as a stability enhancer of highly diverse communities. These results have significant implications for understanding macroecological patterns and the stability of microbial ecosystems. We investigate the growth dynamics of microbial populations, challenging the conventional logistic model.By analyzing empirical data from various biomes, we demonstrate that microbial growth is better described by a generalized logistic model, the θ-logistic model. This accounts for different growth mechanisms and environmental fluctuations, leading to a generalized gamma distribution of abundance fluctuations. Our findings reveal that microbial growth is never sublinear, so they cannot endorse—at least in the microbial world—the recent proposal of this mechanism as a stability enhancer of highly diverse communities. These results have significant implications for understanding macroecological patterns and the stability of microbial ecosystems.
Microbial populations hardly ever grow logistically and never sublinearly
Tipo de Actividad
Artículos en revistasISSN
2470-0045Materias/ categorías / ODS
Instituto de Investigación Tecnológica (IIT) - Dinámica No LinealPalabras Clave
Microbial Growth, Logistic Model, Macroecological Patterns, Environmental FluctuationsMicrobial Growth, Logistic Model, Macroecological Patterns, Environmental Fluctuations

