Resource competition theory predicts that, in equilibrium, the number of coexisting species cannot exceed the number of limiting resources. In some competition models, however, competitive interactions may result in nonequilibrium dynamics, allowing the coexistence of many species on few resources. The relevance of these findings is still unclear, since some assumptions of the underlying models are unrealistic. Most importantly, these models assume that individual growth directly reflects the availability of external resources, whereas real organisms can store resources, thereby decoupling their growth from external fluctuations. Here we study the effects of resource storage by extending the well-known Droop model to the context of multiple...
Local coexistence of species in large ecosystems is traditionally explained within the broad framewo...
We will elaborate the evolutionary course of an ecosystem consisting of a population in a chemostat ...
We develop a framework for analysing the outcome of resource competition based on bifurcation theory...
Resource competition theory predicts that, in equilibrium, the number of coexisting species cannot e...
During the last two decades, the simple view of resource limitation by a single resource has been ch...
Recent theory shows that: (i) competition between multiple species for multiple resources may genera...
The main focus of this thesis is the study of competition for resources among many species, from a t...
We investigate biological mechanisms that generate oscillations and chaos in multispecies competitio...
Models of consumer effects on a shared resource environment have helped clarify how the interplay of...
Explaining coexistence in species-rich communities of primary producers remains a challenge for ecol...
Competitive exclusion – n species cannot coexist on fewer than n limiting resources in a constant an...
Understanding the origins and maintenance of biodiversity remains one of biology’s grand challenges....
In the absence of other limiting factors, assemblages in which species share a common, effective nat...
Understanding the origins and maintenance of biodiversity remains one of biology's grand challenges....
We develop a framework for analysing the outcome of resource competition based on bifurcat...
Local coexistence of species in large ecosystems is traditionally explained within the broad framewo...
We will elaborate the evolutionary course of an ecosystem consisting of a population in a chemostat ...
We develop a framework for analysing the outcome of resource competition based on bifurcation theory...
Resource competition theory predicts that, in equilibrium, the number of coexisting species cannot e...
During the last two decades, the simple view of resource limitation by a single resource has been ch...
Recent theory shows that: (i) competition between multiple species for multiple resources may genera...
The main focus of this thesis is the study of competition for resources among many species, from a t...
We investigate biological mechanisms that generate oscillations and chaos in multispecies competitio...
Models of consumer effects on a shared resource environment have helped clarify how the interplay of...
Explaining coexistence in species-rich communities of primary producers remains a challenge for ecol...
Competitive exclusion – n species cannot coexist on fewer than n limiting resources in a constant an...
Understanding the origins and maintenance of biodiversity remains one of biology’s grand challenges....
In the absence of other limiting factors, assemblages in which species share a common, effective nat...
Understanding the origins and maintenance of biodiversity remains one of biology's grand challenges....
We develop a framework for analysing the outcome of resource competition based on bifurcat...
Local coexistence of species in large ecosystems is traditionally explained within the broad framewo...
We will elaborate the evolutionary course of an ecosystem consisting of a population in a chemostat ...
We develop a framework for analysing the outcome of resource competition based on bifurcation theory...