Multiple Attractors, Saddles, and Population Dynamics in Periodic Habitats

Shandelle M. Henson, R. F. Costantino, J. M. Cushing, Brian Dennis, and Robert A. Desharnais


Abstract

Mathematical models predict that a population which oscillates in the absence of time-dependent factors can develop multiple attracting final states in the advent of periodic forcing. A periodically-forced, stage-structured mathematical model predicted the transient and asymptotic behaviors of Tribolium (flour beetle) populations cultured in periodic habitats of fluctuating flour volume. Predictions included multiple (2-cycle) attractors, resonance and attenuation phenomena, and saddle influences. Stochasticity combined with the deterministic effects of an unstable "saddle cycle" separating the two stable cycles are used to explain the observed transients and final states of the experimental cultures. In experimental regimes containing multiple attractors, the presence of unstable invariant sets, as well as stochasticity and the nature, location, and size of basins of attraction, are all central to the interpretation of data.



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Henson, S.M., Costantino, R.F., Cushing, J.M., Dennis, B., and Desharnais, R.A. 1999. Multiple attractors and population dynamics in periodic habitats. Bulletin of Mathematical Biology 61: 1121–1149.

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This work was supported in part by grants DMS-9306271, DMS-9319073, DMS-9625576, DMS-9616205, DMS-9981374, DMS-9973126, DMS-9981458, and DMS-9981423 from the U.S. National Science Foundation. All opinions expressed are those of the authors and not necessarily those of the NSF.

  Copyright © 1997-2002, Robert A Desharnais
Department of Biological Sciences
California State University, Los Angeles, CA, 90032-8201
Email: rdeshar@calstatela.edu