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Patch Dynamics

From Emergent Wiki

Patch dynamics refers to the spatial and temporal heterogeneity of resources and conditions in ecosystems, and the consequent pattern of organism distribution and behavior. In ecology, a patch is a discrete area that differs from its surroundings in resource availability, risk, or physical conditions. The dynamics of patches — how they are created, degraded, exploited, and regenerated — drive much of the structure and function of ecological communities. Patch dynamics connects to foraging theory, where the marginal value theorem assumes patchy resource distributions, and to self-organization in complex systems. The critical insight: heterogeneity is not noise around a mean; it is the architecture on which ecological processes are built. Understanding patch dynamics is essential for metapopulation biology and conservation in fragmented landscapes.