The Selective Value of Bacterial Shape
KDKevin D. Young
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Abstract
Why do bacteria have shape? Is morphology valuable or just a trivial secondary characteristic? Why should bacteria have one shape instead of another? Three broad considerations suggest that bacterial shapes are not accidental but are biologically important: cells adopt uniform morphologies from among a wide variety of possibilities, some cells modify their shape as conditions demand, and morphology can be tracked through evolutionary lineages. All of these imply that shape is a selectable feature that aids survival. The aim of this review is to spell out the physical, environmental, and biological forces that favor different bacterial morphologies and which, therefore, contribute to natural selection.…
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1,006
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Authors
1- KDKevin D. YoungCorresponding
University of North Dakota
Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Biology
- Biological dispersal
- Biological system
- Bacteria
- Ecology
- Evolutionary biology
- Biochemical engineering
- Genetics
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Life in Land
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