Skip to main navigation
Skip to search
Skip to main content
Ben-Gurion University Research Portal Home
Help & FAQ
Home
Profiles
Research output
Research units
Prizes
Press/Media
Student theses
Activities
Research Labs / Equipment
Datasets
Projects
Search by expertise, name or affiliation
The bioeconomics of tritrophic systems: Applications to invasive species
Andrew Paul Gutierrez, Uri Regev
Department of Economics
Research output
:
Contribution to journal
›
Article
›
peer-review
32
Scopus citations
Overview
Fingerprint
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'The bioeconomics of tritrophic systems: Applications to invasive species'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
Sort by
Weight
Alphabetically
Keyphrases
Invasive Species
100%
System Application
100%
Energy Allocation
100%
Bioeconomics
100%
Tritrophic System
100%
Food Chain
66%
Renewable Resources
66%
Energy Acquisition
66%
Physiological Parameters
33%
Cotton
33%
Evolutionary
33%
Ecological Economics
33%
Ecological Theory
33%
Environmental Hazards
33%
Time to Market
33%
Economic Theory
33%
Physiologically Based Models
33%
Environmental Degradation
33%
Physiologically Based
33%
Newly Established
33%
Individual Utility
33%
Central America
33%
Behavioral Parameters
33%
Trophic Level
33%
Aphid Species
33%
Resource Exploitation
33%
Economic Foundations
33%
Population Dynamics Model
33%
Resource Management Problem
33%
Allocation Strategy
33%
Human Harvesting
33%
Acquisition Strategies
33%
Parameter Degradation
33%
K-strategy
33%
Expected Uncertainty
33%
American Cotton
33%
Renewable Resource Management
33%
Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Invasive Species
100%
Renewable Resource
100%
Food Chain
66%
Evolution
33%
Environmental Hazard
33%
Dynamic Models
33%
Americans
33%
Population Dynamics
33%
Trophic Level
33%
Environmental Degradation
33%
Ecological Economics
33%
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Renewable Resource
100%
Invasive Species
100%
Dynamic Models
33%
Environmental Hazard
33%
Trophic Level
33%
Ecological Theory
33%
Ecological Economics
33%
Resource Exploitation
33%
Environmental Degradation
33%