Effects and biological consequences of the predator-mediated apparent competition I: ODE models
Yuan Lou, Weirun Tao, Zhi-An Wang

TL;DR
This study analyzes predator-mediated apparent competition between native and invasive prey using ODE models with Holling functional responses, revealing key factors influencing invasion success and species coexistence.
Contribution
It provides a detailed classification of global dynamics for Holling type I responses and partial insights for Holling type II, highlighting invasion determinants.
Findings
Initial prey mass influences invasion success.
Capture rates determine invasion outcomes.
Predator mortality rate affects competition effectiveness.
Abstract
This paper is devoted to investigating the effects and biological consequences of the predator-mediated apparent competition based on a two prey species (one is native and the other is invasive) and one predator model with Holling type I and II functional response functions. Through the analytical results and case studies alongside numerical simulations, we find that the initial mass of the invasive prey species, capture rates of prey species, and the predator's mortality rate are all important factors determining the success/failure of invasions and the species coexistence/extinction. The global dynamics can be completely classified for the Holling type I functional response function, but can only be partially determined for the Holling type II functional response function. For the Holling type I response function, we find that whether the invasive prey species can successfully invade…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMathematical and Theoretical Epidemiology and Ecology Models
