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National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis

Project Description

Community ecologists continually strive to build models that realistically describe the dynamics of the systems they study. An important challenge is discovering which biological details are needed for accurate predictions. There is increasing evidence that processes operating at the level of individuals in communities can have an important bearing on the overall dynamics of the community as a whole. A Working Group will be convened to synthesize existing empirical information on the role of individual behavior and life-histories in shaping community dynamics, identify limitations of existing theory in dealing with issues of scaling from individuals to communities and begin developing new mathematical tools that explicitly deal with scaling from individual-level processes to community dynamics.

Principal Investigator(s)

Oswald J. Schmitz

Project Dates

Start: February 17, 1999

End: April 29, 2000

completed

Participants

Benjamin Bolker
Princeton University
Marcel Holyoak
University of California, Davis
Vlastimil Krivan
Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Biological Research Center
Barney Luttbeg
Yale University
Marc Mangel
University of California, Santa Cruz
Locke Rowe
University of Toronto
Oswald J. Schmitz
Yale University
Earl E. Werner
University of Michigan

Products

  1. Journal Article / 2003

    Connecting theoretical and empirical studies of trait-mediated interactions

  2. Journal Article / 2003

    Phenotypic plasticity and interactions among plants

  3. Journal Article / 2000

    Optimal intraguild foraging and population stability

  4. Journal Article / 2003

    Prey state and experimental design affect relative size of trait- and density-mediated indirect effects

  5. Journal Article / 2003

    A review of trait-mediated indirect interactions in ecological communities