The Logistic Model

Description

Bachelor Degree Applied Maths (Logistic Model) Note on The Logistic Model, created by katie.barclay on 17/06/2015.
katie.barclay
Note by katie.barclay, updated more than 1 year ago
katie.barclay
Created by katie.barclay almost 9 years ago
118
1

Resource summary

Page 1

The exponential model only works when the population has unlimited resources. If there is a finite amount of resources then there will be a maximum population size that can be supported. This maximum is called the carrying capacity (M). In these circumstances, the growth rate must depend on the population size; in particular it must approach zero as the population approaches the carry capacity. The simplest way to model this is taking growth rate a(N) = a (1 - N/M), where a is a positive constant called the linear growth rate.This brings us to the logistic model for population growth; dN/dt = a(1 - N/M)N.This is a separable first order ODE which may be rewritten as M dN/dt = a(M - N)N, which has two particular solutions N(t) = 0 and N(t) = M for all t. So, for N(t) not equal to 0, M, we have N(t) = Mn / ((M - n)exp(-at) + n).We can draw logistic curves from the logistic model.

Show full summary Hide full summary

Similar

Statistics Key Words
Culan O'Meara
FREQUENCY TABLES: MODE, MEDIAN AND MEAN
Elliot O'Leary
CUMULATIVE FREQUENCY DIAGRAMS
Elliot O'Leary
HISTOGRAMS
Elliot O'Leary
TYPES OF DATA
Elliot O'Leary
GROUPED DATA FREQUENCY TABLES: MODAL CLASS AND ESTIMATE OF MEAN
Elliot O'Leary
SAMPLING
Elliot O'Leary
chapter 1,2 statistics
Rigo Sanchez
Fractions and percentages
Bob Read
GCSE Maths Symbols, Equations & Formulae
Andrea Leyden
GCSE Maths: Geometry & Measures
Andrea Leyden