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Timescales of population rarity and commonness in random environments
This is a mathematical study of the interactions between non-linear feedback (density dependence) and uncorrelated random noise in the dynamics of unstructured populations. The stochastic non-linear dynamics are generally complex, even when the deterministic skeleton possesses a stable equilibrium....
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Published in: | Theoretical population biology 2006-06, Vol.69 (4), p.351-366 |
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Main Authors: | , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | This is a mathematical study of the interactions between non-linear feedback (density dependence) and uncorrelated random noise in the dynamics of unstructured populations. The stochastic non-linear dynamics are generally complex, even when the deterministic skeleton possesses a stable equilibrium. There are three critical factors of the stochastic non-linear dynamics; whether the intrinsic population growth rate
(
λ
)
is smaller than, equal to, or greater than 1; the pattern of density dependence at very low and very high densities; and whether the noise distribution has exponential moments or not. If
λ
<
1
, the population process is generally transient with escape towards extinction. When
λ
⩾
1
, our quantitative analysis of stochastic non-linear dynamics focuses on characterizing the time spent by the population at very low density (rarity), or at high abundance (commonness), or in extreme states (rarity or commonness). When
λ
>
1
and density dependence is strong at high density, the population process is recurrent: any range of density is reached (almost surely) in finite time. The law of time to escape from extremes has a heavy, polynomial tail that we compute precisely, which contrasts with the thin tail of the laws of rarity and commonness. Thus, even when
λ
is close to one, the population will persistently experience wide fluctuations between states of rarity and commonness. When
λ
=
1
and density dependence is weak at low density, rarity follows a universal power law with exponent
-
3
2
. We provide some mathematical support for the numerical conjecture [Ferriere, R., Cazelles, B., 1999. Universal power laws govern intermittent rarity in communities of interacting species. Ecology 80, 1505–1521.] that the
-
3
2
power law generally approximates the law of rarity of ‘weakly invading’ species with
λ
values close to one. Some preliminary results for the dynamics of multispecific systems are presented. |
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ISSN: | 0040-5809 1096-0325 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.tpb.2006.01.005 |