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Ulf Dieckmann

Principal Research Scholar

Systemic Risk and Resilience Research Group

Advancing Systems Analysis Program

Principal Research Scholar

Cooperation and Transformative Governance Research Group

Advancing Systems Analysis Program

Principal Research Scholar

Exploratory Modeling of Human-natural Systems Research Group

Advancing Systems Analysis Program

Biography

Ulf Dieckmann is a Senior Research Scholar in the IIASA Advancing Systems Analysis (ASA) program. He is working on the theory of adaptive dynamics, fisheries-induced evolution, cooperation evolution, speciation theory, spatial ecology, life-history theory, and on problems in theoretical evolutionary ecology.

Dr. Dieckmann received his bachelor's degree in physics and his master's degree in theoretical physics from the University of Aachen, Germany. He completed his PhD research on theoretical biology at Leiden University, the Netherlands, and obtained his Habilitation (venia legendi) in biomathematics from the University of Vienna. He has worked at Stanford University and the Xerox Palo Alto Research Center, California, USA, the Research Center Julich, Germany, the University of York, UK, Leiden University, the Netherlands, and the University of Vienna, Austria. He has been a visiting professor at the University of Montpellier, France, and a research fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study, Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin, Germany. He is a visiting professor at The Graduate University for Advanced Studies (Sokendai), Hayama, Japan.

CV and online reprints
Google Scholar page

Last update: 19 JAN 2021

Publications

Dieckmann, U. & Heino, M. (2004). Fishing drives rapid evolution. Swedish Research for Sustainability 3/4 18-19.

Ravigne, V., Olivieri, I., & Dieckmann, U. (2004). Implications of habitat choice for protected polymorphisms. Evolutionary Ecology Research 6 (1) 125-145.

Dieckmann, U. (2004). Modern Life History and Its Application to the Management of Natural Resources (ModLife). Final Report on the 5th Framework funded Research Training Network ModLife. Submitted to the European Commission, DG Research, Brussels, Belgium (2004)

Buerger, R. & Krall, C. (2004). Quantitative-genetic models and changing environments. In: Evolutionary Conservation Biology. Eds. Ferriere, R., Dieckmann, U. , & Couvet, D., Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 10.1017/CBO9780511542022.014.

HilleRisLambers, R. & Dieckmann, U. (2003). Competition and predation in simple food webs: Intermediately strong trade-offs maximize coexistence. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 270 (1533) 2591-2598. 10.1098/rspb.2003.2532.