Abstract
A simple mathematical model capable of reproducing formation of small-scale spatial structures in prey–predator system is presented. The migration activity of predators is assumed to be determined by the degree of their satiation. The hungrier individual predators migrate more frequently, randomly changing their spatial position. It has previously been demonstrated that such an individual response to local feeding conditions leads to prey–taxis and emergence of complex spatiotemporal dynamics at population level, including periodic, quasi-periodic and chaotic regimes. The proposed taxis–diffusion–reaction model is applied to describe the trophic interactions in system consisting of benthic diatom microalgae and harpacticoid copepods. The analytical condition for the oscillatory instability of the homogeneous stationary state of species coexistence is given. The model parameters are identified on the basis of field observation data and knowledge on the species ecology in order to explain micro-scale spatial patterns of these organisms, which still remain obscure, and to reproduce in numerical simulations characteristic size and the expected lifetime of density patches.
Funder
Ministry of Education and Science of the Russian Federation
Russian Foundation for Basic Research
Subject
General Mathematics,Engineering (miscellaneous),Computer Science (miscellaneous)
Cited by
18 articles.
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