Ma ZE, Song BJ, Hallam TG. The threshold of survival for systems in a fluctuating environment.
Bull Math Biol 1989;
51:311-23. [PMID:
2730966 DOI:
10.1007/bf02460110]
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Abstract
Thresholds for survival and extinction are important for assessing the risk of mortality in systems exposed to exogenous stress. For generic, rudimentary population models and the classical resource-consumer models of Leslie and Gallopin, we demonstrate the existence of a survival threshold for situations where demographic parameters are fluctuating, generally, in a nonperiodic manner. The fluctuations are assumed to be generated by exogenous, anthropogenic stresses such as toxic chemical exposures. In general, the survival threshold is determined by a relationship between mean stress measure in organisms to the ratio of the population intrinsic growth rate and stress response rate.
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