Comparative dynamics of three models for host-parasitoid interactions in a patchy environment

被引:0
|
作者
Liebe F. Cavalieri
Huseyin Kocak
机构
[1] State University of New York,Division of Natural Sciences, Purchase College
[2] University of Miami,Department of Mathematics and Computer Science
来源
关键词
Hopf Bifurcation; Phase Portrait; Bifurcation Diagram; Phenomenological Model; Negative Binomial;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Phenomenological models represent a simplified approach to the study of complex systems such as host-parasitoid interactions. In this paper we compare the dynamics of three phenomenological models for host-parasitoid interactions developed by May (1978), May and Hassell (1981) and May et al. (1981). The essence of the paper by May and Hassell (1981) was to define a minimum number of parameters that would describe the interactions, avoiding the technical difficulties encountered when using models that involve many parameters, yet yielding a system of equations that could capture the essence of real world interactions in patchy environments. Those studies dealt primarily with equilibrium and coexistence phenomena. Here we study the dynamics through bifurcation analysis and phase portraits in a much wider range of parameter values, carrying the models beyond equilibrium states. We show that the dynamics can be either stable or chaotic depending on the location of a damping term in the equations. In the case of the stable system, when host density dependence acts first, a stable point is reached, followed by a closed invariant curve in phase space that first increases then decreases, finally returning to an asymptotically stable point. Chaos is not seen. On the other hand, when parasitoid attack occurs before host density dependence, chaos is inevitably apparent. We show, as did May et al. (1981) and stated earlier byWang and Gutierrez (1980), that the sequence of events in host-parasitoid interactions is crucial in determining their stability. In a chaotic state the size of the host (e.g., insect pests) population becomes unpredictable, frequently becoming quite large, a biologically undesirable outcome. From a mathematical point of view the system is of interest because it reveals how a strategically placed damping term can dramatically alter the outcome. Our study, reaching beyond equilibrium states, suggests a strategy for biological control different from that of May et al. (1981).
引用
收藏
页码:141 / 155
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Host-parasitoid dynamics of a generalized Thompson model
    Schreiber, Sebastian J.
    JOURNAL OF MATHEMATICAL BIOLOGY, 2006, 52 (06) : 719 - 732
  • [42] Host-parasitoid dynamics in periodic boreal moths
    Várkonyi, G
    Hanski, I
    Rost, M
    Itämies, J
    OIKOS, 2002, 98 (03) : 421 - 430
  • [43] Persistence of multispecies host-parasitoid interactions in spatially distributed models with local dispersal
    Comins, HN
    Hassell, MP
    JOURNAL OF THEORETICAL BIOLOGY, 1996, 183 (01) : 19 - 28
  • [44] MAXIMUM POPULATION SIZES IN HOST-PARASITOID MODELS
    Gomez-Corral, A.
    Lopez Garcia, M.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BIOMATHEMATICS, 2013, 6 (02)
  • [45] Host species differences in the thermal mismatch of host-parasitoid interactions
    Malinski, Katherine H.
    Sorenson, Clyde E.
    Moore, M. Elizabeth
    Willett, Christopher S.
    Kingsolver, Joel G.
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY, 2023, 226 (12):
  • [46] Host-parasitoid dynamics of a generalized Thompson model
    Sebastian J. Schreiber
    Journal of Mathematical Biology, 2006, 52 : 719 - 732
  • [47] Host-parasitoid spatial dynamics in heterogeneous landscapes
    Hirzel, Alexandre H.
    Nisbet, Roger M.
    Murdoch, William W.
    OIKOS, 2007, 116 (12) : 2082 - 2096
  • [48] ALLEE EFFECTS IN AN ITEROPAROUS HOST POPULATION AND IN HOST-PARASITOID INTERACTIONS
    Jang, Sophia R. -J.
    DISCRETE AND CONTINUOUS DYNAMICAL SYSTEMS-SERIES B, 2011, 15 (01): : 113 - 135
  • [49] THE PERSISTENCE OF HOST-PARASITOID ASSOCIATIONS IN PATCHY ENVIRONMENTS .1. A GENERAL CRITERION
    HASSELL, MP
    MAY, RM
    PACALA, SW
    CHESSON, PL
    AMERICAN NATURALIST, 1991, 138 (03): : 568 - 583
  • [50] Complex dynamics and bifurcation analysis of host-parasitoid models with impulsive control strategy
    Yang, Jin
    Tang, Sanyi
    Tan, Yuanshun
    CHAOS SOLITONS & FRACTALS, 2016, 91 : 522 - 532