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BETWEEN DISCRETE AND CONTINUOUS: CONSUMER–RESOURCE DYNAMICS WITH SYNCHRONIZED REPRODUCTION
Author(s) -
Pachepsky E.,
Nisbet R. M.,
Murdoch W. W.
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.144
H-Index - 294
eISSN - 1939-9170
pISSN - 0012-9658
DOI - 10.1890/07-0641.1
Subject(s) - resource (disambiguation) , discrete time and continuous time , population , fecundity , reproduction , ecology , population model , economics , computer science , mathematics , biology , statistics , demography , computer network , sociology
In many consumer–resource systems the consumer population has synchronized reproduction at regular intervals (e.g., years) but consumes the resource and dies continuously, while the resource population grows continuously or has overlapping generations that are short relative to the time between consumer reproductive events. Such systems require “semi‐discrete” models that have both discrete and continuous components. This paper defines and analyzes a canonical, semi‐discrete model for a widespread class of consumer–resource interactions in which the consumer is a discrete breeder and the resource reproduction can be described continuously. The model is the analog of the Nicholson‐Bailey and Lotka‐Volterra models for discrete and continuous systems, respectively. It thereby develops the basis for understanding more realistic, and hence more complex, semi‐discrete models. The model can display stable equilibria, consumer–resource cycles, and single‐species‐like overcompensation cycles. Cycles are induced by high maximum fecundity in the consumer. If the resource grows rapidly and the consumer has high maximum fecundity, the model reduces to a single‐species discrete‐time model of the consumer, which can exhibit overcompensation cycles. By contrast, such cycles in discrete consumer–resource models typically occur only in the resource once the consumer is extinct. Also unlike a common class of discrete models that do not display consumer–resource cycles with periods below four years, semi‐discrete models can exhibit consumer–resource cycles with periods as short as two years.