The book is devoted to the study of limit theorems and stability of
evolving biologieal systems of "particles" in random environment. Here
the term "particle" is used broadly to include moleculas in the infected
individuals considered in epidemie models, species in logistie growth
models, age classes of population in demographics models, to name a few.
The evolution of these biological systems is usually described by
difference or differential equations in a given space X of the following
type and dxt/dt = g(Xt, y), here, the vector x describes the state of
the considered system, 9 specifies how the system's states are evolved
in time (discrete or continuous), and the parameter y describes the
change ofthe environment. For example, in the discrete-time logistic
growth model or the continuous-time logistic growth model dNt/dt =
r(y)Nt(l-Nt/K(y)), N or Nt is the population of the species at time n or
t, r(y) is the per capita n birth rate, and K(y) is the carrying
capacity of the environment, we naturally have X = R, X == Nn(X == Nt),
g(x, y) = r(y)x(l-xl K(y)), xE X. Note that n t for a predator-prey
model and for some epidemie models, we will have that X = 2 3 R and X =
R, respectively. In th case of logistic growth models, parameters r(y)
and K(y) normaIly depend on some random variable y.