A mutualism-competition model characterizing competitors with mutualism at low density
From MaRDI portal
(Redirected from Publication:636438)
Recommendations
- A mutualism-parasitism system modeling host and parasite with mutualism at low density
- An extended mutualism-competition model and its qualitative analysis
- Stability of mutualisms in a lattice gas system of two species
- Mathematical analysis of four species model of mutualism in competitive systems
- Global dynamics of a mutualism-competition model with one resource and multiple consumers
Cites work
Cited in
(20)- Interaction and coexistence with self-regulating species
- An extended mutualism-competition model and its qualitative analysis
- Dynamics of a lattice gas system of three species
- Hutchinson revisited: patterns of density regulation and the coexistence of strong competitors
- Corrigendum to: ``Cooperative and competitive dynamics model for information propagation in online social networks
- Transitions of interaction outcomes in a uni-directional consumer-resource system
- Optimal harvesting in a unidirectional consumer-resource mutualisms system with size structure in the consumer
- Stability of plant-pollinator-ant co-mutualism
- Dynamical implications of bi-directional resource exchange within a meta-ecosystem
- Periodic orbits near heteroclinic cycles in a cyclic replicator system
- Persistence of pollination mutualisms in plant-pollinator-robber systems
- Competition for benefits can promote the persistence of mutualistic interactions
- Dynamics in a ratio-dependent Lotka-Volterra competitive-competitive-cooperative system with feedback controls and delays
- A mutualism-parasitism system modeling host and parasite with mutualism at low density
- A predator-prey model characterizing negative effect of prey on its predator
- Can mutualism alter competitive outcome?: A mathematical analysis
- Competition-induced increase of species abundance in mutualistic networks
- Stability analysis of mutualistic interactions among three species with limited resources for first species and unlimited resources for second and third species
- Ecological models on multi species interaction within unlimited resources
- Microbial cross-feeding promotes multiple stable states and species coexistence, but also susceptibility to cheaters
This page was built for publication: A mutualism-competition model characterizing competitors with mutualism at low density
Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q636438)