Recent simulation modeling has shown that species can coevolve toward clusters of coexisting consumers exploiting the same limiting resource or resources, with nearly identical ratios of coefficients related to growth and mortality. This paper provides a mathematical basis for such as situation; a full analysis of the global dynamics of a new model for such a class of n-dimensional consumer–resource system, in which a set of consumers with identical growth to mortality ratios compete for the same resource and in which each consumer is mutualistic with the resource. First, we study the system of one resource and two consumers. By theoretical analysis, we demonstrate the expected result that competitive exclusion of one of the consumers can o...
Competition and mutualism are inevitable processes in ecology, and a central question is which and h...
We considered the livelihood of two prey species in the presence of a predator species. To understan...
In consumer-resource interactions, a resource is regarded as a biotic population that helps to maint...
Recent simulation modeling has shown that species can coevolve toward clusters of coexisting consume...
It is a tenet of ecological theory that two competing consumers cannot stably coexist on a single li...
This article seeks to determine the extent to which endogenous consumer–resource cycles can contribu...
Mutualisms are ubiquitous in nature, provide important ecosystem services, and involve many species ...
Competitive exclusion – n species cannot coexist on fewer than n limiting resources in a constant an...
Species often interact with multiple mutualistic partners that provide functionally different benefi...
The importance of negative intraspecific density dependence to promoting species coexistence in a co...
Competition can result in evolutionary changes to coexistence between competitors but there are no t...
Investigating the mechanisms by which species persist within complex ecological communities and in v...
Models of consumer effects on a shared resource environment have helped clarify how the interplay of...
<p>We define these regimes as follows: R1: Extinction. R2: Competitive exclusion, only species <i>X<...
The competitive exclusion principle is fundamental to understanding coexistence. Well-established th...
Competition and mutualism are inevitable processes in ecology, and a central question is which and h...
We considered the livelihood of two prey species in the presence of a predator species. To understan...
In consumer-resource interactions, a resource is regarded as a biotic population that helps to maint...
Recent simulation modeling has shown that species can coevolve toward clusters of coexisting consume...
It is a tenet of ecological theory that two competing consumers cannot stably coexist on a single li...
This article seeks to determine the extent to which endogenous consumer–resource cycles can contribu...
Mutualisms are ubiquitous in nature, provide important ecosystem services, and involve many species ...
Competitive exclusion – n species cannot coexist on fewer than n limiting resources in a constant an...
Species often interact with multiple mutualistic partners that provide functionally different benefi...
The importance of negative intraspecific density dependence to promoting species coexistence in a co...
Competition can result in evolutionary changes to coexistence between competitors but there are no t...
Investigating the mechanisms by which species persist within complex ecological communities and in v...
Models of consumer effects on a shared resource environment have helped clarify how the interplay of...
<p>We define these regimes as follows: R1: Extinction. R2: Competitive exclusion, only species <i>X<...
The competitive exclusion principle is fundamental to understanding coexistence. Well-established th...
Competition and mutualism are inevitable processes in ecology, and a central question is which and h...
We considered the livelihood of two prey species in the presence of a predator species. To understan...
In consumer-resource interactions, a resource is regarded as a biotic population that helps to maint...