4.8 Article

Reproductive pair correlations and the clustering of organisms

Journal

NATURE
Volume 412, Issue 6844, Pages 328-331

Publisher

MACMILLAN PUBLISHERS LTD
DOI: 10.1038/35085561

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Clustering of organisms can be a consequence of social behaviour, or of the response of individuals to chemical and physical cues(1). Environmental variability can also cause clustering: for example, marine turbulence transports plankton(2-8) and produces chlorophyll concentration patterns in the upper ocean(9-11). Even in a homogeneous environment, nonlinear interactions between species(12-14) can result in spontaneous pattern formation. Here we show that a population of independent, random-walking organisms ('brownian bugs'), reproducing by binary division and dying at constant rates, spontaneously aggregates. Using an individual-based model, we show that clusters form out of spatially homogeneous initial conditions without environmental variability, predator-prey interactions, kinesis or taxis. The clustering mechanism is reproductively driven-birth must always be adjacent to a living organism. This clustering can overwhelm diffusion and create non-poissonian correlations between pairs (parent and offspring) or organisms, leading to the emergence of patterns.

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