Global dynamics and bifurcation analysis of a chemostat model with obligate mutualism and mortality
Tahani Mtar, Radhouane Fekih-Salem

TL;DR
This paper analyzes a mathematical model of obligate mutualism in a chemostat, revealing complex dynamics and bifurcations influenced by mortality, which enhances understanding of ecological coexistence and stability.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive bifurcation analysis of a mutualistic chemostat model including mortality, highlighting its impact on system stability and multistability.
Findings
Mortality introduces richer dynamics including oscillations and multistability.
Bifurcation analysis reveals various transitions like Hopf and saddle-node bifurcations.
Mortality enables coexistence along limit cycles, not just equilibria.
Abstract
We propose a system of differential equations modeling the competition between two obligate mutualistic species for a single nutrient in a chemostat. Each species promotes the growth of the other, and growth occurs only in the presence of its partner. The three-dimensional model incorporates interspecific density-dependent growth functions and distinct removal rates. We perform a mathematical analysis by characterizing the multiplicity of equilibria and deriving conditions for their existence and stability. Using MatCont, we construct numerical operating diagrams in the parameter space of dilution rate and input substrate concentration, providing a global view of the qualitative dynamics of the system. One-parameter bifurcation diagrams with respect to the input substrate then reveal a variety of dynamical transitions, including saddle-node, Hopf, limit point of cycles LPC,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMathematical and Theoretical Epidemiology and Ecology Models · Evolutionary Game Theory and Cooperation · Ecosystem dynamics and resilience
