Abstract
A simple model is formulated in which the growth of a consumer population is regulated by the diversity, quantity, and quality of alternate environmental resources. Equilibrium population size is dependent not only upon these resource characteristics, but upon the pattern of resource exploitation by the consumer. It is proven that in many circumstances, an exploitation pattern in which each individual uses each of the alternate resources leads to a greater equilibrium size for the consumer population than does a pattern of resource specialization. Therefore, given a knowledge of resource qualities, it is possible to predict the exploitation pattern that will lead to the largest equilibrium population size for the consumer species.
Keywords: theoretical, resource-exploitation model, population growth
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Selected References
These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.
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