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

O Diekmann, M Gyllenberg, JAJ Metz… - Journal of mathematical …, 2010 - Springer
Journal of mathematical biology, 2010Springer
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 differential equation for the resource
concentration). As many results for such systems are available (Diekmann et al. in SIAM J
Math Anal 39: 1023–1069, 2007), we can draw rigorous conclusions concerning dynamical …
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 differential equation for the resource concentration). As many results for such systems are available (Diekmann et al. in SIAM J Math Anal 39:1023–1069, 2007), 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 (Kooijman and Metz in Ecotox Env Saf 8:254–274, 1984; de Roos et al. in J Math Biol 28:609–643, 1990) and a model introduced by Gurney–Nisbet (Theor Popul Biol 28:150–180, 1985) and Jones et al. (J Math Anal Appl 135:354–368, 1988), and next obtain various ecological insights by analytical or numerical studies of special cases.
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