Don DeAngelis, Ph.D. (Former Employee)
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 193
ATLSS PanTrack tool enables visualization of Florida panther movements
South Florida is home to the last remaining population of endangered Florida panthers, estimated at about 60 individuals. Panther survival is threatened by habitat loss and degradation, inbreeding, insufficient numbers of large prey, and disease. Because the few remaining panthers have been so intensively studied, a detailed database is available for individuals in the population. The...
Authors
Donald L. DeAngelis
Applying linear programming to estimate fluxes in ecosystems or food webs: An example from the herpetological assemblage of the freshwater Everglades
We present the application of Linear Programming for estimating biomass fluxes in ecosystem and food web models. We use the herpetological assemblage of the Everglades as an example. We developed food web structures for three common Everglades freshwater habitat types: marsh, prairie, and upland. We obtained a first estimate of the fluxes using field data, literature estimates, and...
Authors
James Diffendorfer, Paul W. Richards, George H. Dalrymple, Donald L. DeAngelis
An individual-based model of rabbit viral haemorrhagic disease on European wild rabbits (Oryctolagus cuniculus)
We developed an individual-based model of Rabbit Viral Hemorrhagic Disease (RVHD) for European wild rabbits (Oryctolagus cuniculus L.), representing up to 1000 rabbits in four hectares. Model output for productivity and recruitment matched published values. The disease was density-dependent and virulence affected outcome. Strains that caused death after several days produced greater...
Authors
John E. Fa, Colin M. Sharples, Diana J. Bell, Donald L. DeAngelis
Importance of the predator's ecological neighborhood in modeling predation on migrating prey
Most mathematical descriptions of predator-prey interactions fail to take into account the spatio-temporal structures of the populations, which can lead to errors or misinterpretations. For example, a compact pulse of prey migrating through a field of quasi-stationary predators may not be well described by standard predator-prey models, because the predators and prey are unlikely to be...
Authors
Donald L. DeAngelis, James H. Petersen
. Ecological conceptual models: a framework and case study on ecosystem management for South Florida sustainability
The Everglades and South Florida ecosystems are the focus of national and international attention because of their current degraded and threatened state. Ecological risk assessment, sustainability and ecosystem and adaptive management principles and processes are being used nationally as a decision and policy framework for a variety of types of ecological assessments. The intent of this...
Authors
J.H. Gentile, M.A. Harwell, W. Cropper, C. C. Harwell, Donald L. DeAngelis, S. E. Davis, J.C. Ogden, D. Lirman
Book review: Simulating ecological and evolutionary systems in C
Review info: Simulating ecological and evolutionary systems in c. By Will Wilson, 2000. ISBN: 978-0521776585, 320 pp.
Authors
Donald L. DeAngelis
Population dynamics and the ecological stability of obligate pollination mutualisms
Mutualistic interactions almost always produce both costs and benefits for each of the interacting species. It is the difference between gross benefits and costs that determines the net benefit and the per-capita effect on each of the interacting populations. For example, the net benefit of obligate pollinators, such as yucca and senita moths, to plants is determined by the difference...
Authors
J. Nathaniel Holland, Donald L. DeAngelis
Linkages between the snail kite population and wetland dynamics in a highly fragmented South Florida landscape: Chapter 6
No abstract available.
Authors
Wiley M. Kitchens, Robert E. Bennetts, Donald L. DeAngelis
Individual-based models: The importance of variability among individuals
Abstract not supplied at this time
Authors
Donald L. DeAngelis, Wolf M. Mooij, M.P. Nott, Robert E. Bennetts
Surface-subsurface exchange and nutrient spiraling: Chapter 6
No abstract available.
Authors
Patrick J. Mulholland, Donald L. DeAngelis
Book review: Nonlinear dynamics of interacting populations
No abstract available. Review info: Nonlinear dynamic of interacting populations. By Alexander D. Bazykin, 1998. ISBN: 978-9810216856, 193 pp.
Authors
Donald L. DeAngelis
Dynamics of prey moving through a predator field: a model of migrating juvenile salmon
The migration of a patch of prey through a field of relatively stationary predators is a situation that occurs frequently in nature. Making quantitative predictions concerning such phenomena may be difficult, however, because factors such as the number of the prey in the patch, the spatial length and velocity of the patch, and the feeding rate and satiation of the predators all interact...
Authors
J.H. Petersen, Donald L. DeAngelis
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 193
ATLSS PanTrack tool enables visualization of Florida panther movements
South Florida is home to the last remaining population of endangered Florida panthers, estimated at about 60 individuals. Panther survival is threatened by habitat loss and degradation, inbreeding, insufficient numbers of large prey, and disease. Because the few remaining panthers have been so intensively studied, a detailed database is available for individuals in the population. The...
Authors
Donald L. DeAngelis
Applying linear programming to estimate fluxes in ecosystems or food webs: An example from the herpetological assemblage of the freshwater Everglades
We present the application of Linear Programming for estimating biomass fluxes in ecosystem and food web models. We use the herpetological assemblage of the Everglades as an example. We developed food web structures for three common Everglades freshwater habitat types: marsh, prairie, and upland. We obtained a first estimate of the fluxes using field data, literature estimates, and...
Authors
James Diffendorfer, Paul W. Richards, George H. Dalrymple, Donald L. DeAngelis
An individual-based model of rabbit viral haemorrhagic disease on European wild rabbits (Oryctolagus cuniculus)
We developed an individual-based model of Rabbit Viral Hemorrhagic Disease (RVHD) for European wild rabbits (Oryctolagus cuniculus L.), representing up to 1000 rabbits in four hectares. Model output for productivity and recruitment matched published values. The disease was density-dependent and virulence affected outcome. Strains that caused death after several days produced greater...
Authors
John E. Fa, Colin M. Sharples, Diana J. Bell, Donald L. DeAngelis
Importance of the predator's ecological neighborhood in modeling predation on migrating prey
Most mathematical descriptions of predator-prey interactions fail to take into account the spatio-temporal structures of the populations, which can lead to errors or misinterpretations. For example, a compact pulse of prey migrating through a field of quasi-stationary predators may not be well described by standard predator-prey models, because the predators and prey are unlikely to be...
Authors
Donald L. DeAngelis, James H. Petersen
. Ecological conceptual models: a framework and case study on ecosystem management for South Florida sustainability
The Everglades and South Florida ecosystems are the focus of national and international attention because of their current degraded and threatened state. Ecological risk assessment, sustainability and ecosystem and adaptive management principles and processes are being used nationally as a decision and policy framework for a variety of types of ecological assessments. The intent of this...
Authors
J.H. Gentile, M.A. Harwell, W. Cropper, C. C. Harwell, Donald L. DeAngelis, S. E. Davis, J.C. Ogden, D. Lirman
Book review: Simulating ecological and evolutionary systems in C
Review info: Simulating ecological and evolutionary systems in c. By Will Wilson, 2000. ISBN: 978-0521776585, 320 pp.
Authors
Donald L. DeAngelis
Population dynamics and the ecological stability of obligate pollination mutualisms
Mutualistic interactions almost always produce both costs and benefits for each of the interacting species. It is the difference between gross benefits and costs that determines the net benefit and the per-capita effect on each of the interacting populations. For example, the net benefit of obligate pollinators, such as yucca and senita moths, to plants is determined by the difference...
Authors
J. Nathaniel Holland, Donald L. DeAngelis
Linkages between the snail kite population and wetland dynamics in a highly fragmented South Florida landscape: Chapter 6
No abstract available.
Authors
Wiley M. Kitchens, Robert E. Bennetts, Donald L. DeAngelis
Individual-based models: The importance of variability among individuals
Abstract not supplied at this time
Authors
Donald L. DeAngelis, Wolf M. Mooij, M.P. Nott, Robert E. Bennetts
Surface-subsurface exchange and nutrient spiraling: Chapter 6
No abstract available.
Authors
Patrick J. Mulholland, Donald L. DeAngelis
Book review: Nonlinear dynamics of interacting populations
No abstract available. Review info: Nonlinear dynamic of interacting populations. By Alexander D. Bazykin, 1998. ISBN: 978-9810216856, 193 pp.
Authors
Donald L. DeAngelis
Dynamics of prey moving through a predator field: a model of migrating juvenile salmon
The migration of a patch of prey through a field of relatively stationary predators is a situation that occurs frequently in nature. Making quantitative predictions concerning such phenomena may be difficult, however, because factors such as the number of the prey in the patch, the spatial length and velocity of the patch, and the feeding rate and satiation of the predators all interact...
Authors
J.H. Petersen, Donald L. DeAngelis