Open Access
Stability and complexity in model ecosystems.
Robert M. May
- Vol. 6, pp 1-235
About:
The article was published on 1973-01-01 and is currently open access. It has received 5524 citations till now.read more
Citations
More filters
Book ChapterDOI
Dynamics of Interactions between Bacteria and Virulent Bacteriophage
TL;DR: The fundamental ecological question that the author will attempt to address in this chapter is: What role do bacteriophage infections play in limiting the abundance of bacteria?
Journal ArticleDOI
Food web structure in riverine landscapes
Guy Woodward,Alan G. Hildrew +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors consider the importance of large scale influences upon lotic food webs across the three spatial dimensions and through time and assess the roles of biotic factors (e.g. predation, competition) and physical habitat features such as geology, land-use, habitat fragmentation in moulding food web structure at the landscape scale.
Journal ArticleDOI
Population cycles of forest Lepidoptera: a maternal effect hypothesis
TL;DR: A two-dimensional difference equation model is developed that relates the average quality of individuals to patterns of abundance and suggests that complex dynamics, i.e. cycles or deterministic chaos, may be more prevalent than once thought, and that higher-dimensioned models are necessary.
Journal ArticleDOI
Cryptic population dynamics: rapid evolution masks trophic interactions.
Takehito Yoshida,Stephen P. Ellner,Laura E. Jones,Brendan J. M. Bohannan,Richard E. Lenski,Nelson G. Hairston +5 more
TL;DR: Modeling suggests that rapid evolution may also confound experimental approaches to measuring interaction strength, but it identifies certain experimental designs as being more robust against potential confounding by rapid evolution.
Journal ArticleDOI
Character displacement and coexistence in mud snails (Hydrobiidae)
TL;DR: The size ratio between the coexisting species usually found (1.3–1.5) allows stable coexistence based on food praticles size selectivity alone and Potamopyrgus jenkinsi does not show character displacement when coexisting with, e.g., H. ventrosa.