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Analyse de Viabilité des Populations×Théorie Métabolique de l'Écologie×
DomaineÉcologieÉcologie
FamilleProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Année d'origine19812004
Auteur d'origineMark ShafferJames Brown
Typeextinction risk assessmentmetabolic scaling theory
Source fondatriceShaffer, M. L. (1981). Minimum population sizes for species conservation. BioScience, 31(2), 131-134. DOI ↗Brown, J. H., Gillooly, J. F., Allen, A. P., Savage, V. M., & West, G. B. (2004). Toward a metabolic basis of ecology. Ecology, 85(7), 1771-1789. DOI ↗
AliasPVA, extinction risk, minimum viable population, MVPMTE, metabolic scaling, temperature-size rule, energy allocation
Apparentées44
RésuméPopulation Viability Analysis (PVA), introduced by Shaffer (1981), estimates the probability that a population will persist over a given time period under specified conditions. PVA combines demographic models (Leslie matrices, IPMs) with stochastic simulation to project population trajectories, quantifying extinction risk. This allows conservation planners to assess whether a population will likely persist, evaluate management scenarios, and estimate the minimum viable population (MVP) size for long-term persistence. PVA is a decision-support tool, not a precise predictor.The Metabolic Theory of Ecology (MTE), developed by Brown and colleagues (2004), provides a unifying framework linking individual metabolic rate to ecological patterns across levels of organization (organisms, populations, ecosystems). MTE predicts how metabolic rate scales with body size (allometry) and temperature, and uses these scaling relationships to explain patterns in life history, population growth, community structure, and ecosystem dynamics. The theory is grounded in physics: metabolic rate is constrained by supply of resources (energy and nutrients) and demand determined by biochemical kinetics.
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ScholarGateComparer des méthodes: Population Viability Analysis · Metabolic Theory of Ecology. Consulté le 2026-06-20 sur https://scholargate.app/fr/compare