1. Recent theory suggests that compensation or even overcompensation in stage-specific biomass can arise in response to increased mortality. Which stage that will show compensation depends on whether maturation or reproduction is the more limiting process in the population. Size-structured theory also provides a strong link between the type of regulation and the expected population dynamics as both depend on size / stage-specific competitive ability. 2. We imposed a size-independent mortality on a consumer-resource system with Daphnia pulex feeding on Scenedesmus obtusiusculus to asses the compensatory responses in Daphnia populations. We also extended an existing stage-structured biomass model by including several juvenile stages to test w...
In the preceding paper (McCauley et al. 1990) we developed a new model for the growth and fecundity ...
Based on numerical experiments with a new physiologically structured population model we demonstrate...
Small competitive advantages may suffice to compensate for a large disadvantage in intrinsic growth ...
The rules governing the allocation of available resources to varying physiological processes are eva...
Patterns of growth, development, and reproduction have been observed in many Daphnia species, and th...
In recent years, some studies addressing the modification of phenotypically plastic traits of Daphni...
The concept of the threshold food concentration that allows metabolic maintenance of an animal (C₀) ...
Variation in offspring size is a common phenomenon in many organisms. In cladoceran zooplankton larg...
Understanding demographic responses to mortality is crucial to predictive ecology. While classic eco...
We performed a series of computer experiments with a population of Daphnia galeata. The life-history...
1. The cladoceran Daphnia serves as an example of an iteroparous organism, with overlapping generati...
Most animals grow substantially during their lifetime and change in competitive ability, predatory c...
We present an overview of a long-term research programme that is aimed at revealing the relations be...
Recently developed theoretical models of stage-structured consumer–resource systems have shown that...
Cladocerans, like many other invertebrates, continue to grow after beginning to reproduce, and their...
In the preceding paper (McCauley et al. 1990) we developed a new model for the growth and fecundity ...
Based on numerical experiments with a new physiologically structured population model we demonstrate...
Small competitive advantages may suffice to compensate for a large disadvantage in intrinsic growth ...
The rules governing the allocation of available resources to varying physiological processes are eva...
Patterns of growth, development, and reproduction have been observed in many Daphnia species, and th...
In recent years, some studies addressing the modification of phenotypically plastic traits of Daphni...
The concept of the threshold food concentration that allows metabolic maintenance of an animal (C₀) ...
Variation in offspring size is a common phenomenon in many organisms. In cladoceran zooplankton larg...
Understanding demographic responses to mortality is crucial to predictive ecology. While classic eco...
We performed a series of computer experiments with a population of Daphnia galeata. The life-history...
1. The cladoceran Daphnia serves as an example of an iteroparous organism, with overlapping generati...
Most animals grow substantially during their lifetime and change in competitive ability, predatory c...
We present an overview of a long-term research programme that is aimed at revealing the relations be...
Recently developed theoretical models of stage-structured consumer–resource systems have shown that...
Cladocerans, like many other invertebrates, continue to grow after beginning to reproduce, and their...
In the preceding paper (McCauley et al. 1990) we developed a new model for the growth and fecundity ...
Based on numerical experiments with a new physiologically structured population model we demonstrate...
Small competitive advantages may suffice to compensate for a large disadvantage in intrinsic growth ...