Coexistence of two types on a single resource in discrete time
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2640496
DOI10.1007/BF00160232zbMath0719.92023WikidataQ113910306 ScholiaQ113910306MaRDI QIDQ2640496
Publication date: 1990
Published in: Journal of Mathematical Biology (Search for Journal in Brave)
competitionconvexitybifurcation theoryRicker modelcompetitive exclusionbistabilityresource availabilityoscillatory coexistencedeterministic model of two asexual typesstable equilibrium population size
Lua error in Module:PublicationMSCList at line 37: attempt to index local 'msc_result' (a nil value).
Related Items (9)
Hutchinson revisited: patterns of density regulation and the coexistence of strong competitors ⋮ Pre-images of invariant sets of a discrete-time two-species competition model ⋮ Relative nonlinearity and permanence ⋮ Spatial mechanisms for coexistence of species sharing a common natural enemy ⋮ Global dynamics of a discrete two-species Lottery-Ricker competition model ⋮ Competitive exclusion and limiting similarity: A unified theory ⋮ Mate limitation in fungal plant parasites can lead to cyclic epidemics in perennial host populations ⋮ Coexistence of competing consumers on a single resource in a hybrid model ⋮ The relative importance of relative nonlinearity and the storage effect in the lottery model
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Stable periodic solutions for two species, density dependent coevolution
- The discrete Rosenzweig model
- A model for population regulation with density- and frequency-dependent selection
- Two species competition in a periodic environment
- Competition systems with periodic coefficients: A geometric approach
- Coexistence of species competing for shared resources
- On Ebenman's model for the dynamics of a population with competing juveniles and adults
- Disturbance, Patch Formation, and Community Structure
- Coevolution in structured demes.
- Simple mathematical models with very complicated dynamics
- The existence of dendritic fronts
This page was built for publication: Coexistence of two types on a single resource in discrete time