What promotes persistence of a single population: an individual-based model
Authored by J Uchmanski
Date Published: 1999
DOI: 10.1016/s0304-3800(98)00179-3
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Abstract
A family of models was analysed describing dynamics of single
populations with non-overlapping generations and explicit resources: a
model with all individuals being identical, the same model but with a
constant and resource-dependent random mortality, and a model with
individual variation due to competition for resources. The population
made up of identical individuals cannot be regulated. It grows
exponentially and then declines to zero. The population with a constant
random mortality typically shows identical behaviour, only the
extinction time of the population being longer. Less frequent in this
case were declines to low numbers after the first maximum followed by
exponential growth to the second maximum, and only then final
extinction. The population with random resource-dependent mortality has
an intermediate extinction time between that of the population without
random mortality and with a constant mortality. Population can be
regulated only in the model with individual variation. Persistence of
such a population depends on the way in which individual hierarchy is
established during resource partitioning and on the frequency of
competition among individuals over their life cycle. (C) 1999 Elsevier
Science B.V. All rights reserved.
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