How parasitism affects critical patch-size in a host--parasitoid model: application to the forest tent caterpillar
DOI10.1016/J.TPB.2004.09.004zbMATH Open1072.92048OpenAlexW2155352580WikidataQ42042109 ScholiaQ42042109MaRDI QIDQ2565628FDOQ2565628
Authors: Christina A. Cobbold, Frithjof Lutscher, M. A. Lewis, Jens Roland
Publication date: 28 September 2005
Published in: Theoretical Population Biology (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tpb.2004.09.004
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DispersalHost-parasitoid modelPopulation cyclesEmergence timeInsect outbreaksIntegrodifferenceSearching efficiency
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Cited In (15)
- Effect of migrations on synchrony in host-parasitoid system
- Density-dependent dispersal in integrodifference equations
- Modeling host-parasitoid interactions with correlated events
- Maximum population sizes in host-parasitoid models
- Population outbreaks in a discrete world
- Mean occupancy time: linking mechanistic movement models, population dynamics and landscape ecology to population persistence
- Host-parasitoid systems are vulnerable to extinction via P-tipping: forest tent caterpillar as an example
- An implicit approach to model plant infestation by insect pests
- The importance of census times in discrete-time growth-dispersal models
- The role of spatial refuges in coupled map lattice model for host-parasitoid systems
- Habitat fragmentation resulting in overgrazing by herbivores
- From individual movement rules to population level patterns: the case of central-place foragers
- Saddle-point approximations, integrodifference equations, and invasions
- Analysis of integrodifference equations with a separable dispersal kernel
- A Taylor polynomial approach for solving the most general linear Fredholm integro-differential-difference equations
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