Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4497827 | Journal of Theoretical Biology | 2010 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Females have larger fertility rate than males. On the other hand, increasing population density favours immature individuals adopting the male role. A positive equilibrium of the system exists whenever fertility and survival rates of one of the sexual roles, if shared by all adults, allow population growing while the opposite happens with the other sexual role. In terms of the female inherent net reproductive number, ηF, it is shown that the positive equilibria are stable when ηF is larger and closed to 1 while for larger values of ηF a certain asymptotic assumption on the investment rate in the female function implies that the population density is permanent. Depending on the other parameters values, the asymptotic behaviour of solutions becomes more complex, even chaotic. In this setting the stabilization/destabilization effects of the abruptness rate in density dependence, of the survival rates and of the competition coefficients are analysed.
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Authors
A. Kebir, S. Ben Miled, M.L. Hbid, R. Bravo de la Parra,