Global redistribution and local migration in semi-discrete host-parasitoid population dynamic models
Brooks Emerick, Abhyudai Singh

TL;DR
This paper investigates how local migration and population redistribution affect the stability of host-parasitoid dynamics using semi-discrete models, revealing conditions that promote stable coexistence.
Contribution
It introduces a semi-discrete modeling framework to analyze spatial effects and functional responses in host-parasitoid interactions, highlighting mechanisms for stability.
Findings
Host redistribution can stabilize populations without parasitoid redistribution.
Type-III functional response enhances stability when combined with spatial effects.
Density-dependent parasitoid migration promotes coexistence even without redistribution.
Abstract
Host-parasitoid population dynamics is often probed using a semi-discrete/hybrid modeling framework. Here, the update functions in the discrete-time model connecting year-to-year changes in the population densities are obtained by solving ordinary differential equations that mechanistically describe interactions when hosts become vulnerable to parasitoid attacks. We use this semi-discrete formalism to study two key spatial effects: local movement (migration) of parasitoids between patches during the vulnerable period; and yearly redistribution of populations across patches outside the vulnerable period. Our results show that in the absence of any redistribution, constant density-independent migration and parasitoid attack rates are unable to stabilize an otherwise unstable host-parasitoid population dynamics. Interestingly, inclusion of host redistribution (but not parasitoid…
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