Long time dynamics of a three-species food chain model with Allee effect in the top predator
Abstract
The Allee effect is an important phenomenon in population biology characterized by positive density dependence, that is a positive correlation between population density and individual fitness. However, the effect is not well studied in multi-level trophic food chains. We consider a ratio dependent spatially explicit three species food chain model, where the top predator is subjected to a strong Allee effect. We show the existence of a global attractor for the the model, that is upper semicontinuous in the Allee threshold parameter m. To the best of our knowledge this is the first robustness result, for a spatially explicit three species food chain model with an Allee effect. Next, we numerically investigate the decay rate to a target attractor, that is when m=0, in terms of m. We find decay estimates that are O(mγ), where γ is found explicitly. Furthermore, we prove various overexploitation theorems for the food chain model, showing that overexploitation has to be driven by the middle predator. In particular overexploitation is not possible without an Allee effect in place. We also uncover a rich class of Turing patterns in the model which depend significantly on the Allee threshold parameter m. Our results have potential applications to trophic cascade control, conservation efforts in food chains, as well as Allee mediated biological control.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.