bifurcations in ecological models
Bifurcations in ecological models refer to critical points where the system undergoes a sudden qualitative change in behavior or structure, leading to different ecological outcomes. These points represent a shift in the stability and dynamics of the ecological system, often triggered by changes in environmental conditions or species interactions.
Requires login.
Related Concepts (21)
- alternative stable states
- bifurcations
- catastrophic shifts
- community dynamics
- competition and coexistence
- ecological feedbacks
- ecological resilience
- ecological tipping points
- ecosystem stability
- equilibrium states
- mathematical modeling in ecology
- mutualistic interactions
- nonlinear dynamics
- oscillatory behavior
- patch dynamics
- population dynamics
- predator-prey interactions
- regime shifts
- stability analysis
- stability thresholds
- synchronization
Similar Concepts
- bifurcation
- bifurcation theory
- bifurcation theory in dynamical systems
- bifurcation theory in population dynamics
- bifurcations in climate models
- bifurcations in conservation management strategies
- bifurcations in control systems
- bifurcations in disease dynamics
- bifurcations in economics and game theory
- bifurcations in fluid dynamics
- bifurcations in neuronal systems
- bifurcations in population dynamics
- bifurcations in spiking neuron models
- climate model parameterization and bifurcations
- neural field models and bifurcations