39 research outputs found

    Moment Closure - A Brief Review

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    Moment closure methods appear in myriad scientific disciplines in the modelling of complex systems. The goal is to achieve a closed form of a large, usually even infinite, set of coupled differential (or difference) equations. Each equation describes the evolution of one "moment", a suitable coarse-grained quantity computable from the full state space. If the system is too large for analytical and/or numerical methods, then one aims to reduce it by finding a moment closure relation expressing "higher-order moments" in terms of "lower-order moments". In this brief review, we focus on highlighting how moment closure methods occur in different contexts. We also conjecture via a geometric explanation why it has been difficult to rigorously justify many moment closure approximations although they work very well in practice.Comment: short survey paper (max 20 pages) for a broad audience in mathematics, physics, chemistry and quantitative biolog

    Can forest management based on natural disturbances maintain ecological resilience?

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    Given the increasingly global stresses on forests, many ecologists argue that managers must maintain ecological resilience: the capacity of ecosystems to absorb disturbances without undergoing fundamental change. In this review we ask: Can the emerging paradigm of natural-disturbance-based management (NDBM) maintain ecological resilience in managed forests? Applying resilience theory requires careful articulation of the ecosystem state under consideration, the disturbances and stresses that affect the persistence of possible alternative states, and the spatial and temporal scales of management relevance. Implementing NDBM while maintaining resilience means recognizing that (i) biodiversity is important for long-term ecosystem persistence, (ii) natural disturbances play a critical role as a generator of structural and compositional heterogeneity at multiple scales, and (iii) traditional management tends to produce forests more homogeneous than those disturbed naturally and increases the likelihood of unexpected catastrophic change by constraining variation of key environmental processes. NDBM may maintain resilience if silvicultural strategies retain the structures and processes that perpetuate desired states while reducing those that enhance resilience of undesirable states. Such strategies require an understanding of harvesting impacts on slow ecosystem processes, such as seed-bank or nutrient dynamics, which in the long term can lead to ecological surprises by altering the forest's capacity to reorganize after disturbance

    Intense or Spatially Heterogeneous Predation Can Select against Prey Dispersal

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    Dispersal theory generally predicts kin competition, inbreeding, and temporal variation in habitat quality should select for dispersal, whereas spatial variation in habitat quality should select against dispersal. The effect of predation on the evolution of dispersal is currently not well-known: because predation can be variable in both space and time, it is not clear whether or when predation will promote dispersal within prey. Moreover, the evolution of prey dispersal affects strongly the encounter rate of predator and prey individuals, which greatly determines the ecological dynamics, and in turn changes the selection pressures for prey dispersal, in an eco-evolutionary feedback loop. When taken all together the effect of predation on prey dispersal is rather difficult to predict. We analyze a spatially explicit, individual-based predator-prey model and its mathematical approximation to investigate the evolution of prey dispersal. Competition and predation depend on local, rather than landscape-scale densities, and the spatial pattern of predation corresponds well to that of predators using restricted home ranges (e.g. central-place foragers). Analyses show the balance between the level of competition and predation pressure an individual is expected to experience determines whether prey should disperse or stay close to their parents and siblings, and more predation selects for less prey dispersal. Predators with smaller home ranges also select for less prey dispersal; more prey dispersal is favoured if predators have large home ranges, are very mobile, and/or are evenly distributed across the landscape

    The stability of multitrophic communities under habitat loss

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    Habitat loss (HL) affects species and their interactions, ultimately altering community dynamics. Yet, a challenge for community ecology is to understand how communities with multiple interaction types—hybrid communities—respond to HL prior to species extinctions. To this end, we develop a model to investigate the response of hybrid terrestrial communities to two types of HL: random and contiguous. Our model reveals changes in stability—temporal variability in population abundances—that are dependent on the spatial configuration of HL. Our findings highlight that habitat area determines the variability of populations via changes in the distribution of species interaction strengths. The divergent responses of communities to random and contiguous HL result from different constraints imposed on individuals’ mobility, impacting diversity and network structure in the random case, and destabilising communities by increasing interaction strength in the contiguous case. Analysis of intermediate HL suggests a gradual transition between the two extreme cases

    Recovery and recrystallization during hot deformation in austenitic steel

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    Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurde eine Simulationsumgebung entwickelt, welche die mikrostrukturellen Prozesse bei der Warmumformung berücksichtigt. Ein orientierungsabhängiges Kristallplastizitätsmodel wurde mit einem Model für große elastische Verformungen gekoppelt. Durch explizite Beschreibung von Erholung und Rekristallisation können Entfestigungseffekte differenziert betrachtet werden. Die Orientierungsauswahl bei der Neukornbildung während der Rekristallisation berücksichtigt die Auswahl einer energetisch optimierten Kornorientierung. Hierdurch kann eine Rekristallisationstextur abgebildet werden. Warmdruck- und Doppelschlagversuche wurden bei unterschiedlichen Temperaturen durchgeführt um die Entfestigungskinetik zu beschreiben. Die Simulationsergebnisse der Fließspannung und der Mikrostrukturentwicklung zeigen eine gute Übereinstimmung mit de durchgeführten Experimenten.A simulation environment is developed to simulate hot rolling and the corresponding microstructure evolution processes. Therefor a crystal plasticity model with orientation dependency is incorporated into a three dimensional large deformation phase-field framework. Softening kinetics is coupled and includes grain evolution-, recovery- and recrystallization kinetics. The development of an oriented nucleation model ensures the analysis of texture evolution. Hot compression and double hit compression tests are carried out at different temperature to specify recrystallization kinetics. Simulation of the macroscopic flow curve evolution and microscopic grain structure show good agreement with the experimental data

    SCAM (Spatial Community Assembly Models)

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    this paper is organized as follows. First we describe the implementation of the model. Then we establish base-line results for comparing spatial and mean-field models using simple community assebly graphs. We then examine the spatial and temporal dynamics of the SCAM model for random transition graphs generated with different degrees of connectance. Finally, we apply transition graphs to model the effects of dispersal, disturbance, and trophic structure on the persistence of species in small, spatially distributed aquatic systems know as phytotelmata. 2 Model Descriptio
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