Search results for "Competition"

showing 10 items of 1409 documents

A Mission Impossible? Learning the Logic of Space with Impossible Figures in Experience-Based Mathematics Education

2016

Most visual effects based on mathematically and physically describable phenomena and formalizable processes. Creating visual illusions, paradox structures and ‘impossible’ figures through playful and artistic procedures, holds an exciting pedagogical opportunity for raising students’ interest towards mathematics and natural sciences and technical aspects of visual arts. The Experience Workshop Math-Art Movement has a number of pedagogical methods, which are connected to visual paradoxes and perspective illusions. In the first part of our article, we introduce classroom exercises connected to the Hungarian artist Tamás F. Farkas’s paradox structures and impossible figures. There are certain …

educationGame mechanicsmatematiikkaOptical illusionComputer scienceIsometric projectionmedia_common.quotation_subjectPerspective (graphical)IllusionContext (language use)Space (commercial competition)mathematics educationMathematics educationlogic of spaceImpossible objectmedia_commonOpus et Educatio
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The impact of variable hatching rates on parasite control: a model of an aquatic ectoparasite in a Finnish fish farm

2006

Summary 1 Many parasites of medical and veterinary importance infect via free-living stages that undergo a period of development in the environment before seeking a host. Frequently, considerable variation is observed in the development rates of these stages, such that some individuals may be considered to occupy distinct subpopulations, similar to a plant's seed bank. Under certain conditions, these subpopulations may act as a reservoir for the parasite, buffering it from the impact of management strategies and reducing control success. 2 We assessed the impact of intraspecific variation in development rates on parasite control by developing a population dynamic model of the ectoparasite A…

education.field_of_studyEcologyEcologyHatchingFish farmingPopulationZoologyBiologyFecundityIntraspecific competitionPersistence (computer science)JuvenileParasite hostingeducationJournal of Applied Ecology
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Inclusive fitness and sexual conflict: How population structure can modulate the battle of the sexes

2014

Competition over reproductive opportunities among members of one sex often harms the opposite sex, creating a conflict of interest between individual males and females. Recently, this battle of the sexes has become a paradigm in the study of intersexual coevolution. Here, we review recent theoretical and empirical advances suggesting that – as in any scenario of intraspecific competition – selfishness (competitiveness) can be influenced by the genetic relatedness of competitors. When competitors are positively related (e.g. siblings), an individual may refrain from harming its competitor(s) and their mate(s) because this can improve the focal individual's inclusive fitness. These findings r…

education.field_of_studyEcologyPopulationInclusive fitnessKin selectionBiologyGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyIntraspecific competitionSexual conflictSexual selectionSocial evolutioneducationhuman activitiesSocial psychologyBattle of the sexesBioEssays
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Operational sex ratio and resource defence as predictors of the mating system in European bitterling

2003

Operational sex ratio (OSR), the ratio of sexually active males to fertilizable females in a population, plays a central role in the theory of mating systems by predicting that the intensity of male–male competition and the degree of sexual selection increases as the OSR becomes increasingly male biased. At high values of OSR, however, resource defence theory predicts the breakdown of territoriality and a shift towards scramble competition with a decrease in sexual selection. The direction that correlations between OSR and resource competition and variance in mating success will take depends on the biology of the species of interest. We investigated the effects of male population density an…

education.field_of_studyEcologyPopulationZoologyAquatic ScienceBiologyMating systembiology.organism_classificationEuropean bitterlingSexual selectionOperational sex ratioMatingeducationScramble competitionSperm competitionreproductive and urinary physiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Fish Biology
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Variability for mixis initiation in Brachionus plicatilis

2001

Deductions from both evolutionary models and inductive argumentation from empirical data support the notion of intraspecific variability for the initiation of sexual reproduction (mixis) within rotifer populations. In this study, we focus on the time and density at which mixis is initiated in a growing population. Cyclical parthenogenetic clones of Brachionus plicatilis established by hatching of resting eggs, isolated from a natural habitat, have been tested at the start of their sexual phase. Clones exhibited great variation for this trait, their time of switching to sexual reproduction being correlated with population density. Most of the variation for mixis initiation has either low or …

education.field_of_studyEcologyPopulationZoologyRotiferParthenogenesisBiologyHeritabilityBrachionusbiology.organism_classificationPopulation densityIntraspecific competitionSexual reproductioneducation
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Competition for breeding sites and site-dependent population regulation in a highly colonial seabird, the common guillemot Uria aalge

2004

Summary 1. The hypothesis of site-dependent population regulation predicts that birds utilize available nesting sites in a pre-emptive (ideal despotic) manner, leading to density dependence in heterogeneous habitats as poorer sites are used at higher population densities. At small population sizes adaptive site choice protects populations against fluctuations (the buffer effect). 2. Common guillemots Uria aalge (Pontoppidan) breed at high density on sea-cliffs. The population breeding on the Isle of May, Scotland increased by 60% between 1981 and 2000. A good nest-site is a prerequisite for successful breeding and there is much competition for the best sites. Throughout this period, site us…

education.field_of_studyEcologymedia_common.quotation_subjectPopulationBiologybiology.organism_classificationPopulation densityBreedIntraspecific competitionCompetition (biology)Spatial heterogeneitybiology.animalUria aalgeAnimal Science and ZoologySeabirdeducationEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_commonJournal of Animal Ecology
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On the evolutionary stability of female infanticide

1997

Territoriality among female rodents may have evolved as an adaptation to intraspecific competition for resources or, alternatively, to defend pups against infanticide. In order to evaluate the latter, we analyse the conditions that allow an infanticidal strategy to invade a population of non-infanticidal females, and the circumstances under which infanticide may become an evolutionarily stable strategy (ESS). Our game theoretical analyses indicate that infanticide has to be associated with some direct (cannibalism) or indirect (reduced competition) resource benefits in order to invade a non-infanticidal population. We also expect that females will primarily kill litters of nearby neighbors,…

education.field_of_studyEcologymedia_common.quotation_subjectPopulationCannibalismTerritorialityBiologyIntraspecific competitionCompetition (biology)Evolutionarily stable strategyAnimal ecologyAnimal Science and ZoologyAdaptationeducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsDemographymedia_commonBehavioral Ecology and Sociobiology
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WHO BEARS THE COSTS OF INTERSPECIFIC COMPETITION IN AN AGE-STRUCTURED POPULATION?

2003

Social and density-dependent life history processes may differ according to age and the reproductive history of individuals. Arvicoline rodents have a typical, season-dependent, bimodal, age distribution of breeding individuals within a population. This distribution may influence population fluctuations. In this study, we measured effects of interspecific competition from field voles (Microtus agrestis) on various fitness components of female bank voles (Clethrionomys glareolus) in an age-structured breeding population in large (0.25 ha) outdoor enclosures. We monitored survival, reproduction, and space use of experimental bank vole populations with females from two different age groups. Wi…

education.field_of_studyEcologymedia_common.quotation_subjectPopulationInterspecific competitionBiologybiology.organism_classificationCompetition (biology)Intraspecific competitionBank voleSeasonal breederReproductioneducationMicrotusEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_commonEcology
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Population dynamics using temporal series analysis in a industrial two-stage activated sludge pilot plant

1998

A time series analysis using an autocorrelation function (ACF) was used to assess the relative importance of density (DD) and non density-dependent - (NDD) factors on microfauna abundance of a two-stage activated sludge pilot plant treating industrial effluents. Although some previous work has detected a carrying capacity for the total microfauna abundance in both reactors, ACF showed a general pattern of non-density dependent abundance regulation. Stationarity due to density-dependent factors was observed for the two major species in the first reactor, the sessile Opercularia asymmetrica and the crawling Chilodonatella minuta. There was no evidence of bacterial competition and only weak ev…

education.field_of_studyEnvironmental Engineeringmedia_common.quotation_subjectPopulationEnvironmental engineeringSoil scienceBiologyOperculariabiology.organism_classificationSubstrate (marine biology)Competition (biology)Activated sludgePilot plantAbundance (ecology)Microfaunaeducationmedia_commonWater Science and TechnologyWater Science and Technology
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Larval Arrest in Development of Tribolium castaneum (Coleoptera: Tenebrionidae)

1986

Arrested larval development (in the last larval instar) of part of the total larval population has been detected in moderately crowded situations (40 larvae in 2 g food) in Tribolium castaneum (Herbst) cultures This phenomenon is the same found previously in highly crowded cultures of Drosophila melanogaster (Meigen) and other related species. The arrest may be viewed as a mechanism of physiological adaptation of organisms to competitive situations.

education.field_of_studyLarvaanimal structuresgenetic structuresEcologyEcologyfungiPopulationZoologyBiologybiology.organism_classificationPopulation densityIntraspecific competitionInsect ScienceInstarPEST analysisAdaptationDrosophila melanogastereducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEnvironmental Entomology
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