Abstract
Organisms reproduce in environments that vary in both time and space. Even if an individual currently resides in a region that is typically quite favorable, it may be optimal for it to "not put all its eggs in the one basket" and disperse some of its off spring to locations that are usually less favorable because the eff ect of unexpectedly poor conditions in one location may be o set by fortuitously good ones in another. I will describe joint work with Peter Ralph and Sebastian Schreiber (both at University of California, Davis) and Arnab Sen (Cambridge) that combines stochastic diff erential equations, random dynamical systems, and even a little elementary group representation theory to explore the eff ects of diff erent dispersal strategies.