ESS germination strategies in randomly varying environments. II. Reciprocal yield-law models
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Publication:1079532
DOI10.1016/0040-5809(85)90023-1zbMath0597.92022OpenAlexW2054743811WikidataQ93640169 ScholiaQ93640169MaRDI QIDQ1079532
Publication date: 1985
Published in: Theoretical Population Biology (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/0040-5809(85)90023-1
Probabilistic models, generic numerical methods in probability and statistics (65C20) Population dynamics (general) (92D25) Ecology (92D40)
Related Items (10)
ESS germination strategies in randomly varying environments. I. Logistic- type models ⋮ Population dynamics and harvesting of semelparous species with phenotypic and genotypic variability in reproductive age ⋮ Invasibility and stochastic boundedness in monotonic competition models ⋮ Evolutionarily stable germination strategies with time-correlated yield ⋮ Variable timing of reproduction in unpredictable environments: Adaption of flood plain plants. ⋮ Algebraic determination of the evolutionary stable germination fraction ⋮ Effect of age on germination of dormant seeds ⋮ Dispersal in patchy environments: The effects of temporal and spatial structure ⋮ Life history tactics of annual organisms: The joint effects of dispersal and delayed germination ⋮ Germination variation facilitates the evolution of seed dormancy when coupled with seedling competition
Cites Work
- Dispersal strategies in patchy environments
- ESS germination strategies in randomly varying environments. I. Logistic- type models
- Niche overlap and invasion of competitors in random environments. I. Models without demographic stochasticity
- A reexamination of stability in randomly varying versus deterministic environments with comments on the stochastic theory of limiting similarity
- The stabilizing effect of a random environment
- ON THEORETICAL MODELS FOR COMPETITIVE AND PREDATORY BIOLOGICAL SYSTEMS
- A comparison of theoretical and empirical results for some stochastic population models
- Density-dependent selection in a random environment: An evolutionary process that can maintain stable population dynamics
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