When we try to study the organization and the properties of ecological systems, non-equilibrium statistical physics is a natural candidate to develop a unified framework for understanding the emergent properties of these kind of systems. Simple interacting particle systems, such as the Voter Model (VM), have found a surprisingly good agreement with empirical data and proved to be a useful null-model that can be treated analytically. Despite the recent progress in this field, still a major issue in ecology and conservation ecology is to understand the effects of habitat fragmentation and heterogeneities on the biodiversity of an ecosystem. Motivated by this open problem, we study the effects of quenched spatial disorder on the long-time behavior of the VM and its nonlinear generalizations.









