A Competition Model for Size-Structured Species

From MaRDI portal
Publication:4735071


DOI10.1137/0149049zbMath0684.92020MaRDI QIDQ4735071

Jim M. Cushing

Publication date: 1989

Published in: SIAM Journal on Applied Mathematics (Search for Journal in Brave)

Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1137/0149049


92D25: Population dynamics (general)

92D40: Ecology

34D05: Asymptotic properties of solutions to ordinary differential equations

34E99: Asymptotic theory for ordinary differential equations


Related Items

A discrete, size-structured chemostat model of plasmid-bearing and plasmid-free competition, A mathematical model for harvesting in a stage-structured cannibalistic system, Dynamics and management of stage-structured fish stocks, An optimal birth control problem for a dynamical population model with size-structure, Competition between microorganisms for a single limiting resource with cell quota structure and spatial variation, Some competition models for size-structured populations, Global weak solution for a multistage physiologically structured population model with resource interaction, Competing predators for a prey in a chemostat model with periodic nutrient input, Asynchronous exponential growth of semigroups of nonlinear operators, Asymptotically autonomous differential equations in the plane, A size-structured, non-conservative ODE model of the chemostat, Nonlinear physiologically structured population models with two internal variables, Age-structured population dynamics with nonlocal diffusion, Finite dimensional state representation of physiologically structured populations, A discrete, size-structured model of microbial growth and competition in the chemostat, A stage-structured fishery model for African catfish and Nile Tilapia feeding on two food resources with harvesting, A mathematical model for continuous crystallization, Existence of equilibrium solutions to a size-structured predator-prey system with functional response, A size-structured model of bacterial growth and reproduction