All natural populations fluctuate in space and time. These fluctuations are a result of internal dynamic processes, and of a variable environment. To understand how and why population fluctuate, one has to understand the nature of the internal demographic processes as well as how a variable environment affects these processes and how they act in concert to generate population fluctuations. This thesis concentrates on the last step - how a variable environment and internal dynamic processes act together to produce population dynamics. In particular, the dynamical consequences of temporal or spatial structure of the environmental fluctuations are investigated, but also how external disturbances propagate through ecological systems. It is show...
One of the most ubiquitous phenomena of all natural populations is their variability in numbers in s...
Population synchrony over various geographical scales is known from a large number of taxa. Three ma...
Theoretical ecologists have long sought to understand how the persistence of populations depends on ...
Natural populations experience environmental conditions that vary across space and over time. This v...
Understanding how stochastic fluctuations in the environment influence population dynamics is crucia...
<div><p>Natural populations experience environmental conditions that vary across space and over time...
The life-history parameters of most living organisms are modified by fluctuations in environmental c...
Many species exhibit widespread spatial synchrony in population fluctuations. This pattern is of gre...
Understanding the relationships between environmental fluctuations, population dynamics and species ...
Structure, in its many forms, is a central theme in theoretical population ecology. At a mathematica...
Environmental variation is a ubiquitous component of individual, population and community processes ...
Environmental variation is an essential part of population dynamics, and two characteristics of such...
When modelling population dynamics within an ecosystem, there are many factors that need to be consi...
The theme of the book is the distribution and abundance of organisms in space and time. The core of ...
The ecosystems of the world are currently facing a variety of anthropogenic perturbations, such as c...
One of the most ubiquitous phenomena of all natural populations is their variability in numbers in s...
Population synchrony over various geographical scales is known from a large number of taxa. Three ma...
Theoretical ecologists have long sought to understand how the persistence of populations depends on ...
Natural populations experience environmental conditions that vary across space and over time. This v...
Understanding how stochastic fluctuations in the environment influence population dynamics is crucia...
<div><p>Natural populations experience environmental conditions that vary across space and over time...
The life-history parameters of most living organisms are modified by fluctuations in environmental c...
Many species exhibit widespread spatial synchrony in population fluctuations. This pattern is of gre...
Understanding the relationships between environmental fluctuations, population dynamics and species ...
Structure, in its many forms, is a central theme in theoretical population ecology. At a mathematica...
Environmental variation is a ubiquitous component of individual, population and community processes ...
Environmental variation is an essential part of population dynamics, and two characteristics of such...
When modelling population dynamics within an ecosystem, there are many factors that need to be consi...
The theme of the book is the distribution and abundance of organisms in space and time. The core of ...
The ecosystems of the world are currently facing a variety of anthropogenic perturbations, such as c...
One of the most ubiquitous phenomena of all natural populations is their variability in numbers in s...
Population synchrony over various geographical scales is known from a large number of taxa. Three ma...
Theoretical ecologists have long sought to understand how the persistence of populations depends on ...