It has been suggested that the saturation density of many populations is adjusted to match environmental conditions by indirect controls rather than by direct physiological response to lack of some critical resource. This hypothesis is widely regarded as untestable since the observable effects of direct and indirect regulation have been held to be indistinguishable. In this paper we show that the way in which the density of a consumer population competing for a single, spatially heterogeneous, limiting resource, “tracks” variations in its environment is characteristically dependent upon the nature of the density limiting mechanism
Spatial differentiation of phenotypes is assumed to be determined by a combination of fluctuating se...
Population models often pose density-dependent rates as relations between current population size on...
Nearly all natural communities exhibit spatial structure, particularly those composed of sessile org...
It has been suggested that the saturation density of many populations is adjusted to match environme...
Abstract. Much ecological research involves identifying connections between abiotic forcing and popu...
1. Resource users have a curvilinear relation of abundance to the richness of their limiting resourc...
1. Population density affects individual performance, though its effects are often mixed. For sessil...
Most population dynamics studies assume that individuals use space uniformly, and thus mix well spa...
No population increases without limit and ecologists have utilised two paradigms to find out why. Th...
Recent theoretical studies have indicated that the evolution of cooperation can be severely constrai...
Spatial and temporal heterogeneity are often described as important factors having a strong impact o...
AbstractThe understanding of the mechanisms that promote biodiversity has implications for conservat...
Simple discrete time models of population growth admit a wide variety of dynamic behaviors, includin...
Resource competition acts at both the individual and the population levels. Stable dynamics result i...
van Benthem K, Wittmann M. Density dependence on multiple spatial scales maintains spatial variation...
Spatial differentiation of phenotypes is assumed to be determined by a combination of fluctuating se...
Population models often pose density-dependent rates as relations between current population size on...
Nearly all natural communities exhibit spatial structure, particularly those composed of sessile org...
It has been suggested that the saturation density of many populations is adjusted to match environme...
Abstract. Much ecological research involves identifying connections between abiotic forcing and popu...
1. Resource users have a curvilinear relation of abundance to the richness of their limiting resourc...
1. Population density affects individual performance, though its effects are often mixed. For sessil...
Most population dynamics studies assume that individuals use space uniformly, and thus mix well spa...
No population increases without limit and ecologists have utilised two paradigms to find out why. Th...
Recent theoretical studies have indicated that the evolution of cooperation can be severely constrai...
Spatial and temporal heterogeneity are often described as important factors having a strong impact o...
AbstractThe understanding of the mechanisms that promote biodiversity has implications for conservat...
Simple discrete time models of population growth admit a wide variety of dynamic behaviors, includin...
Resource competition acts at both the individual and the population levels. Stable dynamics result i...
van Benthem K, Wittmann M. Density dependence on multiple spatial scales maintains spatial variation...
Spatial differentiation of phenotypes is assumed to be determined by a combination of fluctuating se...
Population models often pose density-dependent rates as relations between current population size on...
Nearly all natural communities exhibit spatial structure, particularly those composed of sessile org...