首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     检索      


The bioeconomics of tritrophic systems: applications to invasive species
Institution:1. College of Science Technology, China Three Gorges University, Yichang, Hubei 443002, PR China;2. College of Mathematics and Econometrics, Hunan University, Changsha, Hunan 410082, PR China;3. Hubei Key Laboratory of Hydroelectric Machinery Design and Maintenance, College of Mechanical and Power Engineering, China Three Gorges University, Yichang, Hubei 443002, PR China
Abstract:Adapted species in nature are assumed to have solved renewable resource management problems, and this is examined here using a physiologically based model of energy acquisition and allocation. Newly established invasive species are merely in an early phase of this process in their new environment. Analogies between the economies of humans and other species are used to develop an objective function for individual utility of energy allocation. The objective function includes the physiologically based population dynamics models of the consumer and resource species in a food chain as constraints. The model applies to all trophic levels in a food chain including human harvesting of renewable resources (see also Regev et al. (Regev, U., Gutierrez, A.P., Schreiber, S., Zilberman, D., 1998. Biological and Economic Foundation of Renewable Resource Exploitation. Ecological Economics. 26 (3), 227-242.)).Specifically, the analysis:
  • (1)Attempts to combine ecological and economic theory;
  • (2)Points out the importance of time frame in the two economies (evolutionary vs. market time);
  • (3)Examines the effects of expected uncertainty due to environmental hazards in defining energy acquisition and allocation strategies in two invasive aphid species at the extremes of so called r- and K-strategies and the well adapted Central American cotton–cotton bollweevil system;
  • (4)Evaluates the effects of changes in behavioral and physiological parameters and environmental degradation on the abundance of resource and consumer species.
Keywords:
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号