An explicitly spatial version of the Lotka-Volterra model with interspecific competition
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1578597
DOI10.1214/aoap/1029962871zbMath0948.92022OpenAlexW2094928855MaRDI QIDQ1578597
Stephen W. Pacala, Claudia Neuhauser
Publication date: 4 September 2000
Published in: The Annals of Applied Probability (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1214/aoap/1029962871
Interacting random processes; statistical mechanics type models; percolation theory (60K35) Ecology (92D40)
Related Items
Stochastic Spatial Models of Host-Pathogen and Host-Mutualist Interactions II, Hutchinson revisited: patterns of density regulation and the coexistence of strong competitors, Spatial patterns and coexistence mechanisms in systems with unidirectional flow, Effects of local interactions and local migration on stability, Metapopulation dynamics with quasi-local competition, Survival and coexistence in stochastic spatial Lotka-Volterra models, A spatially explicit model for competition among specialists and generalists in a heterogeneous environment, Fortune favours the brave: movement responses shape demographic dynamics in strongly competing populations, Invasive advance of an advantageous mutation: nucleation theory, Species coexistence in a lattice-structured habitat: effects of species dispersal and interactions, The role of space in the exploitation of resources, Renormalization of the two-dimensional Lotka-Volterra model, Evolution of cooperation by phenotypic similarity, Rescaled Lotka-Volterra models converge to super-stable processes, Weak solutions of stochastic reaction diffusion equations and their optimal control, Numerical analysis of the rebellious voter model, A complete convergence theorem for voter model perturbations, Evolution of dispersal distance, General theory of competitive coexistence in spatially-varying environments., The effect of quenched disorder in neutral theories, Stochastic Spatial Model of Producer-Consumer Systems on the Lattice, Coexistence in locally regulated competing populations and survival of branching annihilating random walk, Survival and complete convergence for a spatial branching system with local regulation, Voter models with heterozygosity selection, Brownian net with killing, Pattern formation of a predator-prey model, Stabilization of species coexistence in spatial models through the aggregation-segregation effect generated by local dispersal and nonspecific local interactions, The competitive exclusion principle versus biodiversity through competitive segregation and further adaptation to spatial heterogeneities, Asymptotic behavior of a metapopulation model, Spatially explicit non-Mendelian diploid model, Coexistence for a multitype contact process with seasons, Rescaled Lotka-Volterra models converge to super-Brownian motion, Stochastic partial differential equation models for spatially dependent predator-prey equations, Self-organized spatial pattern determines biodiversity in spatial competition, Motion by mean curvature in interacting particle systems, Spatial dynamics of invasion: the geometry of introduced species, Recursive tree processes and the mean-field limit of stochastic flows, Evolutionary games on the lattice: payoffs affecting birth and death rates, A particle system with cooperative branching and coalescence, SOME INEQUALITIES FOR THEORETICAL SPATIAL ECOLOGY
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Dual processes and their application to infinite interacting systems
- Annihilating branching processes
- Ergodic theorems for the multitype contact process
- Interaction of Markov processes
- Ergodic theorems for weakly interacting infinite systems and the voter model
- Limit theorems for nonergodic set-valued Markov processes
- Additive and cancellative interacting particle systems
- Survival of one-dimensional cellular automata under random perturbations
- Particle systems and reaction-diffusion equations
- The importance of being discrete (and spatial)
- A long range sexual reproduction process
- Coexistence results for some competition models
- Coexistence for a catalytic surface reaction model
- Spatial aspects of interspecific competition
- The ancestral graph and gene genealogy under frequency-dependent selection
- Nearest-neighbor Markov interaction processes on multidimensional lattices
- A model for spatial conflict
- The biased annihilating branching process