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Spatial Ecology
Editor(s):  Stephen Cantrell, The University of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida, USAChris Cosner, The University of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida, USAShigui Ruan, The University of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida, USA
Series: Chapman & Hall/CRC Mathematical & Computational Biology
Price:  $89.95
Cat. #:  C5985
ISBN:  9781420059854
ISBN 10:  1420059858
Publication Date:  August 05, 2009
Number of Pages:  360
Availability:  In Stock
Binding(s):  Hardback

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Description
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Features
  • Shows how various models, such as reaction-diffusion, multivariate state-space, and metapopulation models, are used in ecological applications
  • Focuses on the impact of space on community structure
  • Integrates the scale and structure of landscapes into mathematical models
  • Links spatial ecology phenomena to evolutionary theory, epidemiology, and economics

Summary

Exploring the relationship between mathematics and ecology, Spatial Ecology focuses on some important emerging challenges in the field. These challenges consist of understanding the impact of space on community structure, incorporating the scale and structure of landscapes into mathematical models, and developing connections between spatial ecology and evolutionary theory, epidemiology, and economics.

The book begins with essays on how spatial effects influence the dynamics of populations and the structure of communities. It then discusses how spatial scale and structure and dispersal behavior connect to phenomena in population dynamics, evolution, epidemiology, and economics. Subsequent chapters focus on the interplay of ecology with evolution, epidemiology, and economics. The chapters on ecology and evolutionary theory provide a guided tour through a number of scenarios and modeling approaches that represent active areas of current research and suggest some paths toward conceptual unification. The book then illustrates how problems in epidemiology and ecology can be profitably addressed by similar modeling regimes. It concludes with essays that describe how ideas from economics, ecology, and quality control theory may be combined to address issues in natural resource management.

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