The interplay of extinction and synchrony in the dynamics of metapopulation formation
John Vandermeer, Zachary Hajian-Forooshani

TL;DR
This paper investigates how different types of local extinctions and migration influence the formation, stability, and synchronization of metapopulations using mathematical maps, revealing critical transitions and mechanisms of population dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a novel analysis of gradual versus catastrophic extinctions and their effects on metapopulation formation and synchronization using discrete maps.
Findings
Catastrophic extinctions are necessary for metapopulation formation.
Increased migration can lead to synchronization and destabilization.
Multiple mechanisms of synchronization, including extinction rescue and stretch reversals.
Abstract
The idea of a metapopulation has become canonical in ecology. Its original mean field form provides the important intuition that migration and extinction interact to determine the dynamics of a population composed of subpopulations. From its conception, it has been evident that the very essence of the metapopulation paradigm centers on the process of local extinction. We note that there are two qualitatively distinct types of extinction, gradual and catastrophic, and explore their impact on the dynamics of metapopulation formation using discrete iterative maps. First, by modifying the classic logistic map with the addition of the Allee effect, we show that catastrophic local extinctions in subpopulations are a pre-requisite of metapopulation formation. When subpopulations experience gradual extinction, increased migration rates force synchrony and drive the metapopulation below the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnimal Ecology and Behavior Studies · Evolutionary Game Theory and Cooperation · Evolution and Genetic Dynamics
