Senescence Example
Cross-source consensus on Senescence Example from 1 sources and 6 claims.
1 sources · 6 claims
Uses
How it works
Benefits
Comparisons
Highlighted claims
- Example 1 models body size as the trait and uses a senescent birth function. — Trait Substitution Sequence process and Canonical Equation for age-structured populations
- The net reproduction condition in Example 1 is satisfied for body sizes approximately between 0.35 and 3.65. — Trait Substitution Sequence process and Canonical Equation for age-structured populations
- In Example 1, the TSS converges almost surely to an ESS near 2.88. — Trait Substitution Sequence process and Canonical Equation for age-structured populations
- Removing senescence raises the ESS from about 2.88 to 3.5. — Trait Substitution Sequence process and Canonical Equation for age-structured populations
- Near the ESS in Example 1, successful mutant traits become rarer as their allowable range shrinks and extinction probabilities rise. — Trait Substitution Sequence process and Canonical Equation for age-structured populations
- Senescence favors faster reproduction over larger body size by restricting effective reproduction to early life. — Trait Substitution Sequence process and Canonical Equation for age-structured populations