In this paper, we present a review about mathematical models of population and community dynamics incorporating individual behaviour. The considered models consist in coupling a game theoretic model, going on at a fast time scale and that describes the change of tactics among individuals in a population or in a community to a model going on at a slow time scale describing the effects in the long term of individual tactics on reproduction and mortality of the populations. As application, an extension of a stage-structured population with intra-individual behavioural variability is presented. Individuals can adopt three different tactics: hawk, dove and bully. We consider a stage-structured population with immature and mature individuals. A m...
© The Author(s) 2015. This article is published with open access at Springerlink.com Abstract We stu...
In the animal world, the competition between individuals belonging to different species for a resour...
International audienceWe consider in this paper the Hawk-Dove game in which each of infinitely many ...
In this paper, we present a review about mathematical models of population and community dynamics in...
hi this paper, we present a review about mathematical models of population and community dynamics in...
In this paper we deal with a nonlinear two-timescale discrete population model that couples age-stru...
Game theoretic models of evolution such as the Hawk–Dove game assume that individuals gain fitness (...
Most classical prey-predator models do not take into account the behavioural structure of the popula...
Most classical prey-predator models do not take into account the behavioural structure of the popula...
We study the dynamics of a predator–prey system where predators fight for captured prey besides sear...
Hostility between two populations n and m is described in terms of a first-order differential equati...
Outcomes of interspecific competition, and especially the possibility of coexistence, have been exte...
A predator-prey model incorporating individual behavior is presented, where the predator-prey intera...
International audienceThe purpose of this paper is to investigate the effects of conflicting tactics...
Copyright c © 2014 Thomas Wieder. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Comm...
© The Author(s) 2015. This article is published with open access at Springerlink.com Abstract We stu...
In the animal world, the competition between individuals belonging to different species for a resour...
International audienceWe consider in this paper the Hawk-Dove game in which each of infinitely many ...
In this paper, we present a review about mathematical models of population and community dynamics in...
hi this paper, we present a review about mathematical models of population and community dynamics in...
In this paper we deal with a nonlinear two-timescale discrete population model that couples age-stru...
Game theoretic models of evolution such as the Hawk–Dove game assume that individuals gain fitness (...
Most classical prey-predator models do not take into account the behavioural structure of the popula...
Most classical prey-predator models do not take into account the behavioural structure of the popula...
We study the dynamics of a predator–prey system where predators fight for captured prey besides sear...
Hostility between two populations n and m is described in terms of a first-order differential equati...
Outcomes of interspecific competition, and especially the possibility of coexistence, have been exte...
A predator-prey model incorporating individual behavior is presented, where the predator-prey intera...
International audienceThe purpose of this paper is to investigate the effects of conflicting tactics...
Copyright c © 2014 Thomas Wieder. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Comm...
© The Author(s) 2015. This article is published with open access at Springerlink.com Abstract We stu...
In the animal world, the competition between individuals belonging to different species for a resour...
International audienceWe consider in this paper the Hawk-Dove game in which each of infinitely many ...