Publication result detail

Exploring population oscillations: Cross-coupling and dispersal effects in prey-predator dynamics

SEN, D.; DEBJANI, M.; SEN, M.

Original Title

Exploring population oscillations: Cross-coupling and dispersal effects in prey-predator dynamics

English Title

Exploring population oscillations: Cross-coupling and dispersal effects in prey-predator dynamics

Type

WoS Article

Original Abstract

In this investigation, we explore the dynamics of a predator-prey metapopulation model with two identical patches, emphasizing the coupling mechanism through the predators' dispersal. The coupling mechanism is a particular case of nearest-neighbor coupling, defined by cross-predation, which depicts the fact that the predators have alternative food resources. The study focuses on how dispersion rates and cross-predation affect species coexistence and system dynamics induced by different kinds of bifurcations associated with periodic orbits and stable states. We examined the structural organization of attractors using bifurcation theory and discovered a variety of intricate dynamics, such as symmetric, asymmetric, boundary, and asynchronous attractors. The onset of synchronous and asynchronous dynamical attractors associated with periodic orbits are analyzed by varying the level of coupling strength and the degree of dispersal rates. Another intriguing phenomenon that occurs in our system is the formation of chaotic attractors with asymmetric dynamics from quasi-periodicity as a result of the Neimark-Sacker (NS) bifurcation. We elucidate the emergence and suppression of chaos using the Poincare return map concept. Our system also exhibits intriguing phenomena, such as bistability and multistability, which indicate that it is capable of preserving ecological diversity and enhancing the level of population persistence. Finally, our findings demonstrate that the system's dynamics are substantially diverse when the dispersal rate is low with limited coupling strengths. The conclusions have a significant impact on the fields of population and evolution science, improving our knowledge of the complex dynamics found in dispersed ecosystems.

English abstract

In this investigation, we explore the dynamics of a predator-prey metapopulation model with two identical patches, emphasizing the coupling mechanism through the predators' dispersal. The coupling mechanism is a particular case of nearest-neighbor coupling, defined by cross-predation, which depicts the fact that the predators have alternative food resources. The study focuses on how dispersion rates and cross-predation affect species coexistence and system dynamics induced by different kinds of bifurcations associated with periodic orbits and stable states. We examined the structural organization of attractors using bifurcation theory and discovered a variety of intricate dynamics, such as symmetric, asymmetric, boundary, and asynchronous attractors. The onset of synchronous and asynchronous dynamical attractors associated with periodic orbits are analyzed by varying the level of coupling strength and the degree of dispersal rates. Another intriguing phenomenon that occurs in our system is the formation of chaotic attractors with asymmetric dynamics from quasi-periodicity as a result of the Neimark-Sacker (NS) bifurcation. We elucidate the emergence and suppression of chaos using the Poincare return map concept. Our system also exhibits intriguing phenomena, such as bistability and multistability, which indicate that it is capable of preserving ecological diversity and enhancing the level of population persistence. Finally, our findings demonstrate that the system's dynamics are substantially diverse when the dispersal rate is low with limited coupling strengths. The conclusions have a significant impact on the fields of population and evolution science, improving our knowledge of the complex dynamics found in dispersed ecosystems.

Keywords

Metapopulation dynamicsDispersalCross-predationIn and anti phase synchronizationPredator-prey dynamics

Key words in English

Metapopulation dynamicsDispersalCross-predationIn and anti phase synchronizationPredator-prey dynamics

Authors

SEN, D.; DEBJANI, M.; SEN, M.

Released

01.02.2025

Publisher

ELSVIER

Location

Netherlands

ISBN

1872-8022

Periodical

Physica D: Nonlinear Phenomena

Volume

2025

Number

472

State

Kingdom of the Netherlands

Pages from

1

Pages to

22

Pages count

22

URL

BibTex

@article{BUT198156,
  author="Deeptajyoti {Sen} and Mondal {Debjani} and Moitri {Sen}",
  title="Exploring population oscillations: Cross-coupling and dispersal effects in prey-predator dynamics",
  journal="Physica D: Nonlinear Phenomena",
  year="2025",
  volume="2025",
  number="472",
  pages="1--22",
  doi="10.1016/j.physd.2025.134525",
  issn="0167-2789",
  url="https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0167278925000041"
}