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个人简介

Ph.D., University of California, Santa Barbara, 2000

研究领域

Ecological theory Population dynamics Foraging behavior Mathematical modeling

All populations fluctuate over time. How much of this variation is due to random events, and how much can we predict from basic ecological theory? I am interested in how individual behavior and life history variation influence population dynamics, and how the feedback from population dynamics influences individual reproductive success. I use mathematical models to make predictions for a variety of taxa, in collaboration with field biologists working in marine, freshwater, and terrestrial habitats.

近期论文

查看导师最新文章 (温馨提示:请注意重名现象,建议点开原文通过作者单位确认)

Shima, J.S., Noonburg, E.G. and Swearer, S.E. (2015). Consequences of variable larval dispersal pathways and resulting phenotypic mixtures to the dynamics of marine metapopulations. Biology Letters 11:20140778. Noonburg, E.G., Chen, A., Shima, J.S. and Swearer, S.E. (2015). Demographic heterogeneity and the dynamics of open populations. Ecology 96:1159-1165. Naudot, V. and Noonburg, E.G. (2013). Predator-prey systems with a general non-monotonic functional response. Physica D 253:1-11. Noonburg, E.G., Nisbet, R.M. and Klanjscek, T. (2010). Effects of life history variation on vertical transfer of toxicants in marine mammals. Journal of Theoretical Biology 264:479-489.

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