Skip to content
ScienceBlog.com
  • Featured Blogs
    • EU Horizon Blog
    • ESA Tracker
    • Experimental Frontiers
    • Josh Mitteldorf’s Aging Matters
    • Dr. Lu Zhang’s Gondwanaland
    • NeuroEdge
    • NIAAA
    • SciChi
    • The Poetry of Science
    • Wild Science
  • Topics
    • Brain & Behavior
    • Earth, Energy & Environment
    • Health
    • Life & Non-humans
    • Physics & Mathematics
    • Social Sciences
    • Space
    • Technology
  • Our Substack
  • Follow Us!
    • Bluesky
    • Threads
    • FaceBook
    • Google News
    • Twitter/X
  • Contribute/Contact

Species interaction

A model developed by evolutionary mathematicians in Canada and Europe reveals that as cooperation becomes easier, it can unexpectedly break down. Researchers from the University of British Columbia and the Hungarian Research Network used computational spatial models to arrange individuals from two species on separate, facing lattices.

Cooperative Behavior Between Species Shows Unexpected Breakdown, New Model Reveals

A photograph of a white-tailed deer standing in a snowy boreal forest, with a blurred background of snow-covered trees

Deer Expanding North, Threatening Caribou

Substack subscription form sign up

Comments

  • Marco Messina on More Than a Third of Americans Have Lost Relationships Over Politics
  • Anon on Why Fructose Behaves Less Like a Calorie and More Like a Hormone
  • Mark Mellinger on Living Plastic Can Self-Destruct on Command
  • Marie Feret on The Silent Frequency That Makes Old Buildings Feel Haunted
  • Dax on The Silent Frequency That Makes Old Buildings Feel Haunted
© 2026 ScienceBlog.com | Follow our RSS / XML feed