Environmental fluctuations and extinction - single species (Q801852): Difference between revisions

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Property / cites work: A population's stationary distribution and chance of extinction in a stochastic environment with remarks on the theory of species packing / rank
 
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Latest revision as of 16:14, 14 June 2024

scientific article
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Environmental fluctuations and extinction - single species
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    Environmental fluctuations and extinction - single species (English)
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    1985
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    The time until a logistically growing population crosses an ''extinction threshold'' is considered, using a realistic nonwhite environmental noise. A qualitatively accurate expression for the cumulative probability of extinction is derived in terms of a product of the species growth rate and the environmental correlation time. When this product is near unity, there is a much greater probability of rapid extinction. This appears to mark a natural division between r- and K-selected species and to suggest a reinterpretation of how their growth parameters evolve. The process is a form of extinctive evolution.
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    logistically growing population
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    extinction threshold
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    nonwhite environmental noise
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    cumulative probability of extinction
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