Structured Population Models in Marine Terrestrial and Freshwater Systems

Structured Population Models in Marine  Terrestrial  and Freshwater Systems
Author: Shripad Tuljapurkar,Hal Caswell
Publsiher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 644
Release: 2012-12-06
Genre: Science
ISBN: 9781461559733

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In the summer of 1993, twenty-six graduate and postdoctoral stu dents and fourteen lecturers converged on Cornell University for a summer school devoted to structured-population models. This school was one of a series to address concepts cutting across the traditional boundaries separating terrestrial, marine, and freshwa ter ecology. Earlier schools resulted in the books Patch Dynamics (S. A. Levin, T. M. Powell & J. H. Steele, eds., Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 1993) and Ecological Time Series (T. M. Powell & J. H. Steele, eds., Chapman and Hall, New York, 1995); a book on food webs is in preparation. Models of population structure (differences among individuals due to age, size, developmental stage, spatial location, or genotype) have an important place in studies of all three kinds of ecosystem. In choosing the participants and lecturers for the school, we se lected for diversity-biologists who knew some mathematics and mathematicians who knew some biology, field biologists sobered by encounters with messy data and theoreticians intoxicated by the elegance of the underlying mathematics, people concerned with long-term evolutionary problems and people concerned with the acute crises of conservation biology. For four weeks, these perspec tives swirled in discussions that started in the lecture hall and carried on into the sweltering Ithaca night. Diversity mayor may not increase stability, but it surely makes things interesting.

Matrix Population Models

Matrix Population Models
Author: Hal Caswell
Publsiher: Sinauer
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2006-05-10
Genre: Science
ISBN: 087893121X

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This book provides a complete treatment of matrix population models and their applications in ecology and demography. It is written for graduate students and researchers in ecology, population biology, conservation biology and human demography.

Body Size The Structure and Function of Aquatic Ecosystems

Body Size  The Structure and Function of Aquatic Ecosystems
Author: Alan G. Hildrew,David G. Raffaelli,Ronni Edmonds-Brown
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 335
Release: 2007-07-12
Genre: Nature
ISBN: 9781139464178

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Ecologists have long struggled to predict features of ecological systems, such as the numbers and diversity of organisms. The wide range of body sizes in ecological communities, from tiny microbes to large animals and plants, is emerging as the key to prediction. Based on the relationship between body size and features such as biological rates, the physics of water and the amount of habitat available, we may be able to understand patterns of abundance and diversity, biogeography, interactions in food webs and the impact of fishing, adding up to a potential 'periodic table' for ecology. Remarkable progress on the unravelling, describing and modelling of aquatic food webs, revealing the fundamental role of body size, makes a book emphasising marine and freshwater ecosystems particularly apt. In this 2007 book, the importance of body size is examined at a range of scales that will be of interest to professional ecologists, from students to senior researchers.

The Dynamics of Physiologically Structured Populations

The Dynamics of Physiologically Structured Populations
Author: Johan A. Metz,Odo Diekmann
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 526
Release: 2014-03-11
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 9783662131596

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Gender structured Population Modeling

Gender structured Population Modeling
Author: M. Iannelli,M. Martcheva,F. A. Milner
Publsiher: SIAM
Total Pages: 190
Release: 2005-01-01
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 0898717485

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Gender-Structured Population Modeling gives a unified presentation of and mathematical framework for modeling population growth by couple formation. It provides an overview of both past and present modeling results. The authors focus on pair formation (marriage) and two-sex models with different forms of the marriage function -- the basis of couple formation -- and discuss which of these forms might make a better choice for a particular population (the United States). The book also provides results on model analysis, gives an up-to-date review of mathematical demography, discusses numerical methods, and puts deterministic modeling of human populations into historical perspective.

An Introduction to Structured Population Dynamics

An Introduction to Structured Population Dynamics
Author: J. M. Cushing
Publsiher: SIAM
Total Pages: 106
Release: 1998-01-01
Genre: Science
ISBN: 1611970008

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Interest in the temporal fluctuations of biological populations can be traced to the dawn of civilization. How can mathematics be used to gain an understanding of population dynamics? This monograph introduces the theory of structured population dynamics and its applications, focusing on the asymptotic dynamics of deterministic models. This theory bridges the gap between the characteristics of individual organisms in a population and the dynamics of the total population as a whole. In this monograph, many applications that illustrate both the theory and a wide variety of biological issues are given, along with an interdisciplinary case study that illustrates the connection of models with the data and the experimental documentation of model predictions. The author also discusses the use of discrete and continuous models and presents a general modeling theory for structured population dynamics. Cushing begins with an obvious point: individuals in biological populations differ with regard to their physical and behavioral characteristics and therefore in the way they interact with their environment. Studying this point effectively requires the use of structured models. Specific examples cited throughout support the valuable use of structured models. Included among these are important applications chosen to illustrate both the mathematical theories and biological problems that have received attention in recent literature.

Spaces of Measures and their Applications to Structured Population Models

Spaces of Measures and their Applications to Structured Population Models
Author: Christian Düll,Piotr Gwiazda,Anna Marciniak-Czochra,Jakub Skrzeczkowski
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 321
Release: 2021-10-07
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 9781316519103

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Presents a comprehensive analytical framework for structured population models in spaces of Radon measures and their numerical approximation.

Data driven Modelling of Structured Populations

Data driven Modelling of Structured Populations
Author: Stephen P. Ellner,Dylan Z. Childs,Mark Rees
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 329
Release: 2016-05-13
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 9783319288932

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This book is a “How To” guide for modeling population dynamics using Integral Projection Models (IPM) starting from observational data. It is written by a leading research team in this area and includes code in the R language (in the text and online) to carry out all computations. The intended audience are ecologists, evolutionary biologists, and mathematical biologists interested in developing data-driven models for animal and plant populations. IPMs may seem hard as they involve integrals. The aim of this book is to demystify IPMs, so they become the model of choice for populations structured by size or other continuously varying traits. The book uses real examples of increasing complexity to show how the life-cycle of the study organism naturally leads to the appropriate statistical analysis, which leads directly to the IPM itself. A wide range of model types and analyses are presented, including model construction, computational methods, and the underlying theory, with the more technical material in Boxes and Appendices. Self-contained R code which replicates all of the figures and calculations within the text is available to readers on GitHub. Stephen P. Ellner is Horace White Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at Cornell University, USA; Dylan Z. Childs is Lecturer and NERC Postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of Animal and Plant Sciences at The University of Sheffield, UK; Mark Rees is Professor in the Department of Animal and Plant Sciences at The University of Sheffield, UK.