Dynamic complexity of a switched host-parasitoid model with Beverton-Holt growth concerning integrated pest management (Q2336479)

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Dynamic complexity of a switched host-parasitoid model with Beverton-Holt growth concerning integrated pest management
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    Dynamic complexity of a switched host-parasitoid model with Beverton-Holt growth concerning integrated pest management (English)
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    19 November 2019
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    Summary: The switched discrete host-parasitoid model with Beverton-Holt growth concerning integrated pest management has been proposed, and the switches are guided by the economic threshold (ET). The integrated pest management (IPM) tactics are applied to prevent the economic injury if the density of host population exceeds the ET, and the IPM tactics are called off once the density of host population descends below ET. To begin with, the regular and virtual equilibria of switched system has been discussed by two or three parameter-bifurcation diagrams, which reveal the regions of different types of equilibria. Besides, numerical bifurcation analyses about inherent growth rates show that the switched discrete system may have complicated dynamics behavior including chaos and the coexistence of multiple attractors. Finally, numerical bifurcation analyses about killing rates indicate that the system comply with the Volterra principle, and initial values of both host and parasitoid populations affect the host outbreaks times.
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