Persistence of structured populations in random environments
Author(s)
Schreiber, Sebastian J
Date issued
2009
In
Theoretical Population Biology
Vol
1
No
76
From page
19
To page
34
Subjects
Random environment Structured populations Persistence Metapopulation Source-sink STOCHASTIC ENVIRONMENTS NOISE COLOR MODELS SPACE VARIABILITY DYNAMICS SYSTEMS TIME SINK COEXISTENCE
Abstract
Environmental fluctuations often have different impacts on individuals that differ in size, age, or spatial location. To understand how population structure, environmental fluctuations, and density-dependent interactions influence population dynamics, we provide a general theory for persistence for density-dependent matrix models in random environments. For populations with compensating density dependence, exhibiting "bounded" dynamics, and living in a stationary environment, we show that persistence is determined by the stochastic growth rate (alternatively, dominant Lyapunov exponent) when the population is rare. If this stochastic growth rate is negative, then the total population abundance goes to zero with probability one. If this stochastic growth rate is positive, there is a unique positive stationary distribution. Provided there are initially some individuals in the population, the population converges in distribution to this stationary distribution and the empirical measures almost surely converge to the distribution of the stationary distribution. For models with overcompensating density-dependence, weaker results are proven. Methods to estimate stochastic growth rates are presented. To illustrate the utility of these results, applications to unstructured, spatially structured, and stage-structured population models are given. For instance, we show that diffusively coupled sink populations can persist provided that within patch fitness is sufficiently variable in time but not strongly correlated across space. (C) 2009 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Publication type
journal article
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