Pushed beyond the brink: Allee effects, environmental stochasticity, and extinction
Gregory Roth, Sebastian Schreiber

TL;DR
This paper investigates how Allee effects and environmental stochasticity influence population persistence and extinction, providing criteria for different outcomes and illustrating counter-intuitive effects through specific models.
Contribution
It offers a comprehensive analysis of stochastic population models with Allee effects, deriving new criteria for persistence and extinction under various feedbacks and fluctuations.
Findings
Stochastic persistence requires geometric mean fitness > 1 at low densities.
Environmental fluctuations can both increase and decrease persistence probabilities.
Conditions for conditional persistence depend on the nature of density-dependent feedbacks.
Abstract
A demographic Allee effect occurs when individual fitness, at low densities, increases with population density. Coupled with environmental fluctuations in demographic rates, Allee effects can have subtle effects on population persistence and extinction. To understand the interplay between these deterministic and stochastic forces, we analyze discrete-time single species models allowing for general forms of density-dependent feedbacks and stochastic fluctuations in demographic rates. Our analysis provide criteria for stochastic persistence, asymptotic extinction, and conditional persistence. Stochastic persistence requires that the geometric mean of fitness at low densities is greater than one. When this geometric mean is less than one, asymptotic extinction occurs with a high probability whenever the initial population density is low. If in addition the population only experiences…
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