Dispersal-mediated coexistence of competing predators
From MaRDI portal
Publication:851410
DOI10.1016/j.tpb.2004.03.003zbMath1111.92062OpenAlexW2082904576WikidataQ51995275 ScholiaQ51995275MaRDI QIDQ851410
Chiemi Hashimoto, Toshiyuki Namba
Publication date: 20 November 2006
Published in: Theoretical Population Biology (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tpb.2004.03.003
Ordinary differential equations modelCompetition-colonization trade-offDispersal-mediated coexistenceMetacommunitySource-sink habitatSpatial synchronySubsidized effect
Related Items (3)
Dispersal-mediated coexistence of indirect competitors in source-sink metacommunities ⋮ Analysis of a spatial predator-prey model with delay ⋮ Competition and species coexistence in a metapopulation model: can fast asymmetric migration reverse the outcome of competition in a homogeneous environment?
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Coexistence of any number of species in the Lotka-Volterra competitive system over two-patches
- Population dynamics in two-patch environments: Some anomalous consequences of an optimal habitat distribution
- Interspecific competition among metapopulations with space-limited subpopulations
- Competition in the gradostat
- Diffusion-mediated persistence in two-species competition Lotka-Volterra model
- Disturbance, coexistence, history, and competition for space
- Spatial heterogeneity and interspecific competition
- Some mathematical problems concerning the ecological principle of competitive exclusion
- Oscillations of two competing microbial populations in configurations of two interconnected chemostats
- On the effects of spatial heterogeneity on the persistence of interacting species
- Pattern formation and the spatial scale of interaction between predators and their prey
- Shaken not stirred: On permanence in ecological communities
- The effects of habitat fragmentation on persistence of source-sink metapopulations in systems with predators and prey or apparent competitors
- On the coexistence of three microbial populations competing for two complementary substrates in configurations of interconnected chemostats
- The importance of being discrete (and spatial)
- The dynamics of two diffusively coupled predator--prey populations.
- Wave of chaos: New mechanism of pattern formation in spatio-temporal population dynamics.
- A minimal model of pattern formation in a prey-predator system
- Diffusion and ecological problems: Modern perspectives.
- A Mathematical Theory for Single-Nutrient Competition in Continuous Cultures of Micro-Organisms
- Competing Predators
- The Theory of the Chemostat
- Regional Coexistence of Species and Competition between Rare Species
- RANDOM DISPERSAL IN THEORETICAL POPULATIONS
- Species coexistence by permanent spatial heterogeneity in a lottery model
This page was built for publication: Dispersal-mediated coexistence of competing predators