The Ricker model, named after Bill Ricker, is a classic discrete population model which gives the expected number Nt+1 (or density) of individuals in generation t + 1 as a function of the number of individuals in the previous generation,[1]
Here r is interpreted as an intrinsic growth rate and k as the carrying capacity of the environment. Unlike some other models like the Logistic map, the carrying capacity in the Ricker model is not a hard barrier that cannot be exceeded by the population, but it only determines the overall scale of the population. The Ricker model was introduced in 1954 by Ricker in the context of stock and recruitment in fisheries.
The model can be used to predict the number of fish that will be present in a fishery.[2][3] Subsequent work has derived the model under other assumptions such as scramble competition,[4] within-year resource limited competition[5] or even as the outcome of source-sink Malthusian patches linked by density-dependent dispersal.[6][7] The Ricker model is a limiting case of the Hassell model[5] which takes the form
Ricker, W. E. (1975) Computation and Interpretation of Biological Statistics of Fish Populations. Bulletin of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada, No 119. Ottawa.