This article verifies that the ideal free distribution (IFD) is evolutionarily stable, provided the payoff in each patch decreases with an increasing number of individuals. General frequency-dependent models of migratory dynamics that differ in the degree of animal omniscience are then developed. These models do not exclude migration at the IFD where balanced dispersal emerges. It is shown that the population distribution converges to the IFD even when animals are nonideal (i.e., they do not know the quality of all patches). In particular, the IFD emerges when animals never migrate from patches with a higher payoff to patches with a lower payoff and when some animals always migrate to the best patch. It is shown that some random migration d...
The concept of an ideal and free use of limiting resources is commonly invoked in behavioural ecolog...
Under the ideal free distribution (IFD), the number of organisms competing for a resource at differe...
International audienceIn this paper, we reanalyze simple models of the evolution of dispersal in a h...
This article verifies that the ideal free distribution (IFD) is evolutionarily stable, provided the ...
In this article, we develop population game theory, a theory that combines the dynamics of animal be...
The important biological problem of how groups of animals should allocate themselves between differe...
[[abstract]]The dispersal of organisms plays an important role in determining the dynamics of ecolog...
1. The Ideal Free Distribution (IFD) is one of the most widely applied theoretical concepts in ecolo...
The effect of the behavioral dynamics of movement on the population dynamics of interacting species ...
Ideal free distribution (IFD) theory offers an important baseline for predicting the distribution of...
We study theoretically the effect of inter-habitat migration on the distribution of population sizes...
A key assumption of the ideal free distribution (IFD) is that there are no costs in moving between h...
In the presented work we study an application of evolutionary game theory in behavioral ecology, spe...
The introduced dispersal-foraging game is a combination of prey habi2 tat selection among two patch...
The evolution of partial migration in birds is typically assumed to be the result of an optimization...
The concept of an ideal and free use of limiting resources is commonly invoked in behavioural ecolog...
Under the ideal free distribution (IFD), the number of organisms competing for a resource at differe...
International audienceIn this paper, we reanalyze simple models of the evolution of dispersal in a h...
This article verifies that the ideal free distribution (IFD) is evolutionarily stable, provided the ...
In this article, we develop population game theory, a theory that combines the dynamics of animal be...
The important biological problem of how groups of animals should allocate themselves between differe...
[[abstract]]The dispersal of organisms plays an important role in determining the dynamics of ecolog...
1. The Ideal Free Distribution (IFD) is one of the most widely applied theoretical concepts in ecolo...
The effect of the behavioral dynamics of movement on the population dynamics of interacting species ...
Ideal free distribution (IFD) theory offers an important baseline for predicting the distribution of...
We study theoretically the effect of inter-habitat migration on the distribution of population sizes...
A key assumption of the ideal free distribution (IFD) is that there are no costs in moving between h...
In the presented work we study an application of evolutionary game theory in behavioral ecology, spe...
The introduced dispersal-foraging game is a combination of prey habi2 tat selection among two patch...
The evolution of partial migration in birds is typically assumed to be the result of an optimization...
The concept of an ideal and free use of limiting resources is commonly invoked in behavioural ecolog...
Under the ideal free distribution (IFD), the number of organisms competing for a resource at differe...
International audienceIn this paper, we reanalyze simple models of the evolution of dispersal in a h...