The effect of seasonal strength and abruptness on predator-prey dynamics
Alix M.C. Sauve, Rachel A. Taylor, Fr\'ed\'eric Barraquand

TL;DR
This study investigates how the abruptness and shape of seasonal environmental changes influence predator-prey dynamics, revealing that sudden seasonal transitions can induce chaos at lower forcing levels than smooth sine wave changes.
Contribution
It provides a numerical analysis showing the impact of seasonal forcing shape on ecological dynamics, emphasizing the importance of realistic seasonal models in ecological predictions.
Findings
Abrupt seasonal forcing triggers chaos at lower levels than sine waves.
Variance in forcing reduces but does not eliminate effects of abruptness.
The shape of seasonal forcing significantly influences predator-prey population fluctuations.
Abstract
Coupled dynamical systems in ecology are known to respond to the seasonal forcing of their parameters with multiple dynamical behaviours, ranging from seasonal cycles to chaos. Seasonal forcing is predominantly modelled as a sine wave but the transition between seasons is often more sudden. Some studies mentioned the robustness of their results to the shape of the forcing signal, without detailed analyses. Therefore, whether and how the shape of seasonal forcing affects the dynamics of coupled dynamical systems remains unclear, while abrupt seasonal transitions are widespread in ecological systems. To provide some answers, we conduct a numerical analysis of the dynamical response of predator--prey communities to the shape of the forcing signal by exploring the joint effect of two features of seasonal forcing: the magnitude of the signal, which is classically the only one studied, and…
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