Mobility-limiting antipredator response in the rock-paper-scissors model
J. Menezes, B. Moura

TL;DR
This study explores how mobility-limiting antipredator responses in a rock-paper-scissors ecological model influence spatial patterns, species coexistence, and ecosystem stability through stochastic simulations.
Contribution
It introduces a model where antipredator response radius affects organism mobility and spatial pattern formation, revealing new insights into predator-prey dynamics.
Findings
Antipredator responses create spiral spatial patterns.
Less localized antipredator responses increase species patch size.
Higher mobility constrains promote species coexistence.
Abstract
Antipredator behavior is present in many biological systems where individuals collectively react to an imminent attack. The antipredator response may influence spatial pattern formation and ecosystem stability but requires an organism's cost to contribute to the collective effort. We investigate a nonhierarchical tritrophic system, whose predator-prey interactions are described by the rock-paper-scissors game rules. In our spatial stochastic simulations, the radius of antipredator response defines the maximum prey group size that disturbs the predator's action, determining the individual cost to participate in antipredator strategies. We consider that each organism contributes equally to the collective effort, having its mobility limited by the proportion of energy devoted to the antipredator reaction. Our outcomes show that the antipredator response leads to spiral patterns, with the…
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