Two Distinct Types of Natural Selection in Turbidostat-like and Chemostat-like Ecosystems
β Scribed by Jaroslav Flegr
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1997
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 137 KB
- Volume
- 188
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-5193
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The size stability of natural populations indicates that natality and mortality rates are on average equal. Fine tuning of the two independent processes suggests the existence of a regulating mechanism. Two types of such mechanisms exist. A decrease in the number of organisms can either speed up the natality rate or slow down the mortality rate. The former mechanism (chemostat-like) acts whenever the population growth is limited by the concentration of a resource. The latter (turbidostat-like) could be suspected whenever the population growth is limited by predators or parasites. Simulation experiments showed that under chemostat-like and turbidostat-like conditions, organisms are selected toward efficiency (grams of biomass produced/grams of resource consumed) and natality rate (grams of biomass/time), respectively. The existence of two types of selection and the nature of parameters that are selected to recall the old idea of r-K strategies. The main difference is that while the old model predicts the existence of r-K continuum, this model shows that the two strategies are exclusive.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Normal syngeneic spleen cells were found to inhibit the local growth of the Lewis lung carcinoma (3LL) when injected together with the tumor cells" at a ratio of lO0 : 1 (spleen to tumor cells). The repeated injection of the tumor cells together with spleen cells enventually led to the selection of
## Abstract ## Purpose To describe two different types of βringβlike enhancementβ seen on dynamic magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of breast cancer, and compare their histopathological features. ## Materials and Methods A total of 326 breast carcinomas in 311 patients were evaluated regarding th
## Background: The rat PC12 pheochromocytoma cell line provides an established system for the study of neuronal differentiation. To our knowledge, glial differentiation has not been reported in this cell line. Methods: We have studied, by immunohistochemistry and immunoblotting, the presence of n