PALABRAS DEL INGLÉS RELACIONADAS CON «GAUSE'S PRINCIPLE»
Gause's principle
gause
principle
ecology
competitive
exclusion
sometimes
referred
just
proposition
that
states
species
competing
same
resources
cannot
coexist
other
ecological
factors
constant
when
even
science
daily
compete
biology
encyclopedia
britannica
also
called
grinnell
axiom
after
soviet
biologist
american
naturalist
topic
bird
theory
share
exactly
habitat
otherwise
course
time
would
have
eliminated
limiting
similarity
according
using
resource
coexisting
exceed
certain
from
answers
gauzz
prinspl
statement
occupy
simultaneously
university
texas
paso
russian
ecologist
stated
what
come
known
indefinitely
college
agriculture
§bornss
rather
than
conceived
order
draw
analogy
process
march
british
mechanistic
verification
arxiv
rule
hypothesis
volterra
interspecific
competition
cyclic
predator
prey
system
qiuhui
pana
haoying
wangc
luyi
chenb
zhong
huangc
mingfeng
effect
partitioning
10 LIBROS DEL INGLÉS RELACIONADOS CON «GAUSE'S PRINCIPLE»
Descubre el uso de
Gause's principle en la siguiente selección bibliográfica. Libros relacionados con
Gause's principle y pequeños extractos de los mismos para contextualizar su uso en la literatura.
1
Animal Behavior Desk Reference: A Dictionary of Animal ...
1993, 1143). competitive exclusion, competitive- exclusion principle □ See
principle: Gause's principle. constant-environment principle □ n. Any population
allowed to reproduce itself in a constant environment will attain a stable age ...
2
The 80/20
Principle and 92 Other Power Laws of Nature: The ...
ThenGause puttwoorganisms ofthesame speciesinthejar,with the same amount
offoodas before. This time, they fought and died. I call this Gause's Principle of
Survival by Differentiation, or PSD forshort. Laterin this chapter I'll explain why
Ithink ...
3
The Ecology of Agroecosystems
Two forms of Gause's principle exist. First, if competition between two species is
too intense, one of the species will disappear from the environment. Second, if
niche overlap is too large, one of the species will disappear from the environment
.
4
Academic Press Dictionary of Science and Technology
Also, Gause's principle. Gauss, Karl Friedrich |gous] 1777-1855, German
mathematician; proved fundamental theorem of algebra; major contributions in
geometry, number theory, astronomy, and electromagnetism. gauss
Electromagnetism. a ...
Christopher G. Morris, 1992
5
Doing Science : Design, Analysis, and Communication of ...
This is more or less the idea of Gause's principle: only one species can survive in
a niche. Much theorizing has been built on the basis of this principle. One
difficulty with the idea is that few ecologists seem to agree on a definition of the T
...
Marine Biological Laboratory Ivan Valiela Professor of Biology Boston University Marine Program, 2000
6
Network Economics of Marine Ecosystems and their Exploitation
11.1.1 Questioning Gause's principle plays a major role in ecological theory (
Gause, 1936; Levin, 1970). It states that when several similar predator species
compete for one prey species, only one of them survives. The principle is
supported ...
Thus, they are good examples of Gause's principle: two species of the same
requirements should not (or cannot) occupy the same ecological situation, or "
niche." The range of M. corniculata is Humboldt County to southern California;
that of M.
Edward Flanders Ricketts, David W. Phillips, 1985
8
Dictionary of Scientific Principles
As a consequence, competing related species often evolve distinguishing
characteristics in areas where they both coexist.* See also COMPETITIVE
EXCLUSION PRINCIPLE. GAUSE'S PRINCIPLE [ecology] (1) Closely related
organisms do ...
9
Ecology and Wildlife Biology
Gause's Principle : It states that closely related species with a substantial degree
of niche overlap, often compete for the same resources and frequently one may
displace the other. Gaue's principle which could never be stated clearly by him ...
10
The Emergence of Everything: How the World Became Complex
As a tribute to Gause's work the principle of competitive exclusion is most widely
known as Gause's principle. The studies outlined above appeared in 1934 in a
book appropriately named The Struggle for Existence. Following Gause's work, a
...