Extinction of bistable populations is affected by the shape of their initial spatial distribution
Yifei Li, Stuart T. Johnston, Pascal R. Buenzli, Peter van Heijster,, Matthew J. Simpson

TL;DR
This study investigates how the initial spatial distribution shape influences the survival or extinction of bistable populations using stochastic lattice models and reaction-diffusion equations.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of the impact of initial spatial arrangements on population extinction, combining discrete and continuum modeling approaches.
Findings
Initial distribution shape significantly affects extinction outcomes.
Different spatial arrangements lead to varied survival probabilities.
Software for modeling is publicly available on GitHub.
Abstract
The question of whether biological populations survive or are eventually driven to extinction has long been examined using mathematical models. In this work we study population survival or extinction using a stochastic, discrete lattice-based random walk model where individuals undergo movement, birth and death events. The discrete model is defined on a two-dimensional hexagonal lattice with periodic boundary conditions. A key feature of the discrete model is that crowding effects are introduced by specifying two different crowding functions that govern how local agent density influences movement events and birth/death events. The continuum limit description of the discrete model is a nonlinear reaction-diffusion equation, and we focus on crowding functions that lead to linear diffusion and a bistable source term that is often associated with the strong Allee effect. Using both the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMathematical and Theoretical Epidemiology and Ecology Models · Evolution and Genetic Dynamics · Stochastic processes and statistical mechanics
MethodsDiffusion
