How the resource supply distribution structures competitive communities
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2670199
Recommendations
- Limiting similarity, species packing, and the shape of competition kernels
- Evolution of species trait through resource competition
- Population dynamics and competitive outcome derive from resource allocation statistics: the governing influence of the distinguishability of individuals
- Species coexistence under resource competition with intraspecific and interspecific direct competition in a chemostat
- Competition, trait variance dynamics, and the evolution of a species' range
Cites work
- A theory for the evolutionary game
- Adaptive dynamics, a geometrical study of the consequences of nearly faithful reproduction
- Branching scenarios in eco-evolutionary prey-predator models
- Coevolution of species in competition: a theoretical study.
- Evolutionary dynamics of seed size and seedling competitive ability
- Modelling coevolution in ecological networks with adaptive dynamics
- On invasion boundaries and the unprotected coexistence of two strategies
- The branching bifurcation of adaptive dynamics
- Unfolding the resident-invader dynamics of similar strategies
- Unlimited niche packing in a Lotka-Volterra competition game
- When the exception becomes the rule: the disappearance of limiting similarity in the Lotka-Volterra model
Cited in
(5)- Evolution of species trait through resource competition
- The combined effects of competition and niches on competitive outcomes of a phytoplankton model in heterogeneous acidified lakes
- Competition, trait variance dynamics, and the evolution of a species' range
- Adaptive diversification and niche packing on rugged fitness landscapes
- Limiting similarity, species packing, and the shape of competition kernels
This page was built for publication: How the resource supply distribution structures competitive communities
Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q2670199)