Dynamical Dark Energy (DE) is a viable alternative to the cosmological
constant. Yet, constructing tests to discriminate between Lambda and dynamical
DE models is difficult because the differences are not large. In this paper we
explore tests based on the galaxy mass function, the void probability function
(VPF), and the number of galaxy clusters. At high z the number density of
clusters shows large differences between DE models, but geometrical factors
reduce the differences substantially. We find that detecting a model dependence
in the cluster redshift distribution is a hard challenge. We show that the
galaxy redshift distribution is potentially a more sensitive characteristics.
We do so by populating dark matter halos in Nbody simulations with galaxies
using well-tested Halo Occupation Distribution (HOD). We also estimate the Void
Probability Function and find that, in samples with the same angular surface
density of galaxies in different models, the VPF is almost model independent
and cannot be used as a test for DE. Once again, geometry and cosmic evolution
compensate each other. By comparing VPF's for samples with fixed galaxy mass
limits, we find measurable differences.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figures, dependence on mass-luminosity relation
discussed, minor changes to match the accepted version by MNRA