Speaker
Description
Consumer–resource models provide a framework for describing interacting populations mediated by shared resources and have been widely used to study the dynamics of complex biological systems. In this work, we examine consumer–resource systems from a dynamical perspective. Starting from simple model settings, we extend the analysis to a triangular region and investigate how structural constraints shape system behavior. Alongside the theoretical analysis, we discuss how these models connect to concrete biological contexts, including ecological and microbial systems. This combination of analytical results and applications provides a unified perspective on consumer–resource dynamics and offers insight into the mechanisms underlying complex biological processes.