Stochastic population growth in spatially heterogeneous environments
Steven N. Evans, Peter L. Ralph, Sebastian J. Schreiber, and Arnab Sen

TL;DR
This paper models how spatial heterogeneity, dispersal, and environmental stochasticity influence population growth and persistence, providing analytical insights into optimal dispersal strategies and ecological dynamics under uncertainty.
Contribution
It introduces a stochastic model for spatially structured populations, deriving the long-term growth rate and analyzing the effects of dispersal mechanisms and constraints.
Findings
The stochastic growth rate equals the space-time average per-capita growth minus variance effects.
Optimal dispersal strategies maximize the stochastic growth rate.
Constraints on dispersal influence population persistence and growth.
Abstract
Classical ecological theory predicts that environmental stochasticity increases extinction risk by reducing the average per-capita growth rate of populations. To understand the interactive effects of environmental stochasticity, spatial heterogeneity, and dispersal on population growth, we study the following model for population abundances in patches: the conditional law of given is such that when is small the conditional mean of is approximately , where and are the abundance and per capita growth rate in the -th patch respectivly, and is the dispersal rate from the -th to the -th patch, and the conditional covariance of and is approximately . We show for such a spatially extended population that if…
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