Ecological invasion, roughened fronts, and a competitor's extreme advance: integrating stochastic spatial-growth models
DOI10.1007/s11538-009-9398-6zbMath1168.92044arXiv1007.1621OpenAlexW2132622484WikidataQ51180935 ScholiaQ51180935MaRDI QIDQ836217
Thomas Caraco, Lauren O'Malley, Gyorgy Korniss
Publication date: 31 August 2009
Published in: Bulletin of Mathematical Biology (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1007.1621
spatial modelextreme-value statisticsecological invasionfront-runner distributionpreemptive competitionstochastic roughening
Statistics of extreme values; tail inference (62G32) Signal detection and filtering (aspects of stochastic processes) (60G35) Ecology (92D40)
Related Items (4)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- The effects of spatial heterogeneity in population dynamics
- Pair-edge approximation for heterogeneous lattice population models
- Long range dispersal and spatial pattern formation in biological invasions
- Invasive advance of an advantageous mutation: nucleation theory
- Contact interactions on a lattice
- Multidimensional nonlinear diffusion arising in population genetics
- The importance of being discrete (and spatial)
- Speed of invasion in lattice population models: Pair-edge approximation
- Interacting particles, the stochastic Fisher-Kolmogorov-Petrovsky-Piscounov equation, and duality
- Front propagation into unstable states
- The minimal speed of traveling fronts for a diffusive Lotka-Volterra competition model.
- Mathematical biology. Vol. 2: Spatial models and biomedical applications.
- Spatial instabilities within the diffusive Lotka-Volterra system: Individual-based simulation results
- Spreading speed and linear determinacy for two-species competition models
- Analysis of linear determinacy for spread in cooperative models
- Airy distribution function: from the area under a Brownian excursion to the maximal height of fluctuating interfaces
- Dynamic Scaling of Growing Interfaces
- Size distribution of clusters in irreversible kinetic aggregation
- Extreme fluctuations in noisy task-completion landscapes on scale-free networks
- Limit Theorems for the Maximum Term in Stationary Sequences
- Spread rate for a nonlinear stochastic invasion
This page was built for publication: Ecological invasion, roughened fronts, and a competitor's extreme advance: integrating stochastic spatial-growth models