Periodically Varying Externally Imposed Environmental Effects on Population Dynamics
B2 arXiv preprint server (q-bio) · 2004-04-02 · United States
Effects of externally imposed periodic changes in the environment on population dynamics are studied with the help of a simple model. The environmental changes are represented by the temporal and spatial dependence of the competition terms in a standard equation of evolution. Possible applications of the analysis are on the one hand to bacteria in Petri dishes and on the other to rodents in the context of the spread of the Hantavirus epidemic. The analysis shows that spatio-temporal structures emerge, with interesting features which depend on the interplay of separately controllable aspects of the externally imposed environmental changes.
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HORIZON metadata
| Source | arXiv preprint server (q-bio) (arxiv) |
|---|---|
| NATO rating | B2 — see methodology |
| Country | United States |
| Reported date | 2004-04-02 |
| Ingested at | 2026-05-12 00:55 UTC |