Population with Continuous and Discrete Growth In discrete breeding population the species may breed only at a specific time usually at a particular time of the year. Breeding seasons introduce some delay in the regulative process. A population growth model may be defined as continuous population grow | |
Spread of a Pest Population - Population Invasion Invasive pest population is one of the serious threats faced in population ecology. Pests are likely to get introduced into an area through transportation and if they find suitable environmental conditions, they start to exploit the resources and spread a | |
Age Structured Leslie Matrix Leslie matrix is a discrete, age-structured model of population growth that is very popular in population ecology. It was invented by and named after P. H. Leslie. The Leslie Matrix (also called the Leslie Model) is one of the best known ways to describe | |
Stage Structured Leslie Matrix Stage structured Leslie matrix are used when individuals are censused (rather than marked from after the birth) and the age of individual cannot be known for some reason. In such population individuals are described by size classes (e.g., fishes, deer, fr | |
Metapopulation Dynamics -Levins Model Metapopulation is a population in which individuals are spatially distributed in a habitat to two or subpopulations. Populations of butterflies and coral-reef fishes are good examples of metapopulation . | |
Interspecific Competition and Coexistence Major focus in community ecology is about understanding the factors underlying species coexistence (Carrete et al). When dealing with competition between native and exotic species, the competitive exclusion of the ‘weaker’ species can have consequence | |
Effect of Interspecific Competition on Species Border Interspecific competition refers to the competition between individuals of different species for some limiting resource. | |
Logistic Population Growth: Continuous and Discrete The density of population increases until it reaches a maximum sustainable density that is set by the availability of resources. This upper limit to population growth, called the carrying capacity. Populations in this kind of environment show what is know | |
Parasitoid-Host Dynamics In this exercise,you will explore two parsitoid-host dynamics models that differ in their description of the dispersion pattern of the host population. The first model is the negative binomial model and second is the Nicholson-Bailey model. | |
Conserving an Endangered Species To study the dynamics of an endangered species to develop and apply suitable management plans to recover or repopulate such animals. |
Copyright @ 2024 Under the NME ICT initiative of MHRD |