Daphnia revisited: Local stability and bifurcation theory for physiologically structured population models explained by way of an example

<i>Daphnia</i> revisited: Local stability and bifurcation theory for physiologically structured population models explained by way of an example

Authors:   Diekmann O, Gyllenberg M, Metz JAJ, Nakaoka S, de Roos AM

Publication Year:   2010

Reference:  Journal of Mathematical Biology, 61(2):277-318 (August 2010) (Published online 22 September 2009)

Abstract

We consider the interaction between a general size-structured consumer population and an unstructured resource. We show that stability properties and bifurcation phenomena can be understood in terms of solutions of a system of two delay equations (a renewal equation for the consumer population birth rate coupled to a delay differetial equation for the resource concentration). As many results for such systems are available, we can draw rigorous conclusions concerning dynamical behaviour from an analysis of a characteristic equation. We derive the characteristic equation for a fairly general class of population models, including those based on the Kooijman-Metz Daphnia model and a model introduced by Gurney-Nisbet and Jones et al., and next obtain various ecological insights by analytical or numerical studies of special cases.

KEYWORDS: Physiologically structured population models; Size-structure; Delay equations; Linearised sability; Characteristic equation

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