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Phys. Rev. E 63, 061904 (2001) [4 pages]

Phase transition in a spatial Lotka-Volterra model

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György Szabó1 and Tamás Czárán2
1Research Institute for Technical Physics and Materials Science, P.O. Box 49, H-1525 Budapest, Hungary
2Theoretical Biology and Ecology Research Group of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences and Department of Plant Taxonomy and Ecology, Eötvös University, Ludovika tér 2, H-1083 Budapest, Hungary

Received 22 August 2000; published 23 May 2001

Spatial evolution is investigated in a simulated system of nine competing and mutating bacterium strains, which mimics the biochemical war among bacteria capable of producing two different bacteriocins (toxins) at most. Random sequential dynamics on a square lattice is governed by very symmetrical transition rules for neighborhood invasions of sensitive strains by killers, killers by resistants, and resistants by sensitives. The community of the nine possible toxicity/resistance types undergoes a critical phase transition as the uniform transmutation rates between the types decreases below a critical value Pc above that all the nine types of strains coexist with equal frequencies. Passing the critical mutation rate from above, the system collapses into one of three topologically identical (degenerated) states, each consisting of three strain types. Of the three possible final states each accrues with equal probability and all three maintain themselves in a self-organizing polydomain structure via cyclic invasions. Our Monte Carlo simulations support that this symmetry-breaking transition belongs to the universality class of the three-state Potts model.

© 2001 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevE.63.061904
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevE.63.061904
PACS:
87.23.Cc, 05.10.-a, 05.40.Fb, 64.60.Ht