This paper explores the effect of spatial processes in a heterogeneous environment on the dynamics of a host-parasitoid interaction. The environment consists of a lattice of favourable (habitat) and hostile (matrix) hexagonal cells, whose spatial distribution is measured by habitat proportion and spatial autocorrelation (inverse of fragmentation). At each time step, a fixed fraction of both populations disperses to the adjacent cells where it reproduces following the Nicholson-Bailey model. Aspects of the dynamics analysed include extinction, stability, cycle period and amplitude, and the spatial patterns emerging from the dynamics. We find that, depending primarily on the fraction of the host population that disperses in each generation an...
An important problem in spatial ecology is to understand how population-scale patterns emerge from i...
Structure, in its many forms, is a central theme in theoretical population ecology. At a mathematica...
Spatial structure across fragmented landscapes can enhance regional population persistence by promot...
This paper explores the effect of spatial processes in a heterogeneous environment on the dynamics o...
Subpopulations of organisms in different habitat patches may differ from each other in biotic (e.g.,...
Subpopulations of organisms in different habitat patches may differ from each other in biotic (e.g.,...
Subpopulations of organisms in different habitat patches may differ from each other in biotic (e.g.,...
A mathematical model of the spatio-temporal dynamics of a two host, two parasitoid system is present...
A mathematical model of the spatio-temporal dynamics of a two host, two parasitoid system is present...
There is an increasing recognition that individual-level spatial and temporal heterogeneity may play...
There is an increasing recognition that individual-level spatial and temporal heterogeneity may play...
A mathematical model of the spatio-temporal dynamics of a two host, two parasitoid system is present...
Spatial patterning can be crucially important for understanding the behavior of interacting populati...
Spatially structured models of host-parasitoid interactions exhibit self-structuring into spatial pa...
Spatially structured models of host-parasitoid interactions exhibit self-structuring into spatial pa...
An important problem in spatial ecology is to understand how population-scale patterns emerge from i...
Structure, in its many forms, is a central theme in theoretical population ecology. At a mathematica...
Spatial structure across fragmented landscapes can enhance regional population persistence by promot...
This paper explores the effect of spatial processes in a heterogeneous environment on the dynamics o...
Subpopulations of organisms in different habitat patches may differ from each other in biotic (e.g.,...
Subpopulations of organisms in different habitat patches may differ from each other in biotic (e.g.,...
Subpopulations of organisms in different habitat patches may differ from each other in biotic (e.g.,...
A mathematical model of the spatio-temporal dynamics of a two host, two parasitoid system is present...
A mathematical model of the spatio-temporal dynamics of a two host, two parasitoid system is present...
There is an increasing recognition that individual-level spatial and temporal heterogeneity may play...
There is an increasing recognition that individual-level spatial and temporal heterogeneity may play...
A mathematical model of the spatio-temporal dynamics of a two host, two parasitoid system is present...
Spatial patterning can be crucially important for understanding the behavior of interacting populati...
Spatially structured models of host-parasitoid interactions exhibit self-structuring into spatial pa...
Spatially structured models of host-parasitoid interactions exhibit self-structuring into spatial pa...
An important problem in spatial ecology is to understand how population-scale patterns emerge from i...
Structure, in its many forms, is a central theme in theoretical population ecology. At a mathematica...
Spatial structure across fragmented landscapes can enhance regional population persistence by promot...