Victor Peris Yague
Ecological and Evolutionary Aspects of Microbial Population Growth in Confined Spaces.
Rel. Alessandro Pelizzola, Oskar Hallatschek. Politecnico di Torino, Corso di laurea magistrale in Physics Of Complex Systems (Fisica Dei Sistemi Complessi), 2023
|
Preview |
PDF (Tesi_di_laurea)
- Tesi
Licenza: Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial No Derivatives. Download (18MB) | Preview |
Abstract
Spatial structure can play a pivotal role in defining an ecosystem's biodiversity, as well as its stability and adaptive capabilities. Emerging in the 1960s, a new theoretical framework was developed in the field of ecology aimed at describing island ecosystems (MacArthur & Wilson, 1967), which quickly gained popularity and was applied to a wide range of ecosystems and even influenced policy-making (Wu & Vankat, 1995). Despite its impact, it largely remained a theoretical framework and many of its claims or hypotheses remained unverified experimentally (Wu & Vankat, 1995; Levin, 1992). In fact, later work pointed to some of the gaps in island theory and stressed the need to couple ecological and evolutionary dynamics, as well as emphasizing the relevance of the correct choice of scale in describing ecosystems (Levin, 1992).
More recently, studies have emerged in the field of microbial ecology and evolution with an explicit focus on the effects of spatial structure (Hallatschek & Nelson, 2008)
Relatori
Anno Accademico
Tipo di pubblicazione
Numero di pagine
Corso di laurea
Classe di laurea
Aziende collaboratrici
URI
![]() |
Modifica (riservato agli operatori) |
