Consequences of Traceable Mobility in Populations Exhibiting Strong Allee Effect

Authors

  • Baltazar Espinoza Biocomplexity Institute and Initiative, Network Systems Science and Advanced Computing Division, University of Virginia, Virginia, USA.
  • Yun Kang Sciences and Mathematics Faculty, College of Integrative Sciences and Arts, Arizona State University, Mesa, USA.
  • Oyita Udiani Department of Mathematics and Applied Mathematics, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, USA.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15517/es.2023.55393

Abstract

In this research, we study the impacts of the traceable mobility in a two-patch environment when the population in each patch exhibits strong Allee effects. Traveling individuals are traced across patches by budgeting the average time spent in each patch while keeping their place of residency. Particularly, we focus on the impact that the effective population (residents and visitors) produces on regional dynamics.

Our results show that low mobility across regions produces simple dynamics, where orbits converge to single or double extinction, or to a coexistence steady state. We derive mobility conditions under which an endangered population may benefit of the presence of a visitant one and avoid extinction -- the rescue effect. Nonetheless, increments in the visiting population would also lead the resident population to extinction -- the induced extinction effect.

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Published

2023-06-28

How to Cite

Espinoza, B., Kang, Y., & Udiani, O. (2023). Consequences of Traceable Mobility in Populations Exhibiting Strong Allee Effect. Epi-SCIENCE, 1(1). https://doi.org/10.15517/es.2023.55393