A Primer of Ecology, Page 2A Primer of Ecology presents a concise but detailed exposition of the most common mathematical models in population and community ecology. It is intended to demystify ecological models and the mathematics behind them by deriving the models from first principles. The Primer explains in detail basic concepts of exponential and logistic population growth, age-structured demography, metapopulation dynamics, competition, predation, island biogeography, and, in a chapter new to this edition, succession. The book may be used as a self-teaching tutorial by students, as a primary textbook, or as a supplemental text to a general ecology textbook. |
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Page 156
... species - area relationship : large islands support more species than small islands . The pattern holds for most ... number of species in the community ( species richness ) . Figure 7.1a shows a typical species - area relationship for ...
... species - area relationship : large islands support more species than small islands . The pattern holds for most ... number of species in the community ( species richness ) . Figure 7.1a shows a typical species - area relationship for ...
Page 159
... species than islands of the Greater Antilles . Some of the smaller islands , such as Antigua and Barbuda , are flat ... number is still greater on large islands than small , suggesting that other forces may be at work . In the next section , ...
... species than islands of the Greater Antilles . Some of the smaller islands , such as Antigua and Barbuda , are flat ... number is still greater on large islands than small , suggesting that other forces may be at work . In the next section , ...
Page 161
... species present on the island , the greater the rate at which species disappear . This relationship occurs because ... number of species on an island reaches an equilibrium when ( dS / dt ) equals zero . Setting Expression 7.3 equal to ...
... species present on the island , the greater the rate at which species disappear . This relationship occurs because ... number of species on an island reaches an equilibrium when ( dS / dt ) equals zero . Setting Expression 7.3 equal to ...
Contents
X | 9 |
Logistic Population Growth | 25 |
AgeStructured Population Growth | 49 |
Copyright | |
14 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
age class Allee effect allenbyi ascidian assumptions axis birth and death birth rate calculate capita carrying capacity Chapter coexistence colonization competition constant death rate decrease density-dependent depend ecology equilibrium model equilibrium point Euler equation example exponential growth exponential growth model Expression extinction rate Figure functional response grassland habitat immigration rate interspecific competition isocline of species iteroparous K-selection K₁ large islands Leslie matrix logistic growth Lotka-Volterra model MacArthur-Wilson model maximum metapopulation metapopulation models N₁ number of individuals Number of predators number of species Number of victims offspring parasite passive sampling model patches pioneer species population growth rate population sizes predator and victim predator isocline predator population prey propagule rate of increase red grouse represents reproductive value rescue effect semelparous source pool species richness species-area relationship stage vector state-space graph survivorship curve tion transition matrix turnover ulation variance victim abundance victim isocline victim population zero