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Posts Tagged ‘Population Structure’

Abstract: Recent theory in social evolution has been mainly concerned with competition and cooperation within social groups of animals and their impact on the stability of those groups. Much less attention has been paid to conflicts arising as a result of solitary floaters (outsiders) attempting to join groups of established residents (insiders). We model such conflicts over group-membership using a demographically explicit approach in which the rates of births and deaths in a population determine the availability of group-vacancies and the number of floaters competing over these vacancies. We find that the outcome of within-group competition, reflected in the partitioning of reproduction among group members, exerts surprisingly little influence on the resolution of insider-outsider conflict.

The outcome of such conflict is also largely unaffected by differences in resource holding potential between insiders and outsiders. By contrast, whether or not groups form is mainly determined by demographic factors (variation in vital rates such as fecundity and mortality) and the resulting population dynamics. In particular, at high floater densities territory defense becomes too costly, and groups form because insiders give in to the intruder pressure imposed on them by outsiders. We emphasize the importance of insider-outsider conflicts in social evolution theory and highlight avenues for future research.

A Sense of Place shortlink: http://wp.me/pISTJ-hi

Full Article:  http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ece3.533/pdf

Port, M     Johnstone, R A  Facing the crowd: intruder pressure, within-group competition, and the resolution of conflicts over group-membership
Ecology and Evolution
Volume 3, Issue 5, pages 1209–1218, May 2013

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Overview: We describe the fertility and marriage behavior of populations in Israel, broken down by nationality, religion, religiosity and nativity-status. Although our main focus is on a detailed presentation of fertility patterns, we also look at marriage behavior, as it is closely related to fertility in Israel..Until now, little has been documented about the basic fertility and marriage behavior of different population groups..The descriptive findings form the basis for a clearer understanding of fertility and marriage patterns in different population subgroups in Israel.

A Sense of Place Permalink: http://wp.me/pISTJ-h3

Full Text: http://www.demographic-research.org/volumes/vol28/17/28-17.pdf

Okum, B. (12 Mar 2013).Fertility and marriage behavior in Israel: Diversity, change, and stability.Demographic Research  (Volume 28 – Article 17 )

Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research

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Precis: Links between hundreds of millions of names belonging to people all around the world have been analysed by geographers from UCL and the University of Auckland. The results reveal how our forenames and surnames are connected in distinct global networks of cultural, ethnic and linguistic communities.

The researchers’ methods could be of use to social scientists and health researchers investigating migration, identity and integration.

A Sense of Place permalink: http://wp.me/pISTJ-dh

Full Text: http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0022943

Summary: http://www.ucl.ac.uk/news/news-articles/1109/11090801-Naming-networks-Mateos

Ethnicity and Population Structures in Personal Naming Networks
Mateos P, Longley PA, O’Sullivan D, 2011 Networks.
PLoS ONE 6(9): e22943.doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0022943

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