Life and death near a windy oasis
- 1 July 2000
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Journal of Mathematical Biology
- Vol. 41 (1) , 1-23
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s002850000025
Abstract
We propose a simple experiment to study delocalization and extinction in inhomogeneous biological systems. The nonlinear steady state for, say, a bacteria colony living on and near a patch of nutrient or favorable illumination (“oasis”) in the presence of a drift term (“wind”) is computed. The bacteria, described by a simple generalization of the Fisher equation, diffuse, divide A→A + A, die A→ 0, and annihilate A + A→ 0. At high wind velocities all bacteria are blown into an unfavorable region (“desert”), and the colony dies out. At low velocity a steady state concentration survives near the oasis. In between these two regimes there is a critical velocity at which bacteria first survive. If the “desert” supports a small nonzero population, this extinction transition is replaced by a delocalization transition with increasing velocity. Predictions for the behavior as a function of wind velocity are made for one and two dimensions.Keywords
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- Periodic phenomena in Proteus mirabilis swarm colony developmentJournal of Bacteriology, 1996