Exploitation is a common feature of social interactions, which can be modified by ecological context. Here we investigate effects of ecological history on exploitation phenotypes in bacteria. In experiments with the bacterium Myxococcus xanthus, prior resource levels of different genotypes interacting during cooperative multicellular development were found to regulate social fitness, including whether cheating occurs. Responses of developmental spore production to experimental manipulation of resource-level histories differed between interacting cooperators and cheaters, and relative fitness advantages gained by cheating after high-resource growth were generally reduced or absent if one or both parties experienced low-resource growth. Low-resource growth also eliminated exploitation in some pairwise mixes of cooperative natural isolates that occurs when both strains have grown under resource abundance. Our results contrast with previous experiments in which cooperator fitness correlated positively with concurrent resource level and suggest that resource-level variation may be important in regulating whether exploitation of cooperators occurs in a natural context.
Keywords: Cheating; Cooperation; Ecological history; Exploitation; Resource level.
© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the International Society for Microbial Ecology.