Weakly dissipative predator-prey systems
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1817462
DOI10.1007/BF02459486zbMath0856.92020OpenAlexW2054507683WikidataQ115609945 ScholiaQ115609945MaRDI QIDQ1817462
Publication date: 24 February 1997
Published in: Bulletin of Mathematical Biology (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/bf02459486
chaosseasonal forcingweak dissipationnon-integrable Hamiltonian systemspredator-prey modelsstochastic perturbationsstable limit cyclesinfinite numbers of coexisting periodic attractorsneutrally stable periodic orbitsquadratic interaction terms
Related Items (11)
OBSERVABILITY OF CHAOS AND CYCLES IN ECOLOGICAL SYSTEMS: LESSONS FROM PREDATOR–PREY MODELS ⋮ Generalized synchronization in a conservative and nearly conservative systems of star network ⋮ Applications of KAM theory to population dynamics ⋮ Periodic local disturbance in host-parasitoid metapopulations: host suppression and parasitoid persistence ⋮ Competitive coexistence of seasonal breeders ⋮ Synchronizability of nonidentical weakly dissipative systems ⋮ Sub-harmonic resonance and multi-annual oscillations in northern mammals: A nonlinear dynamical systems perspective ⋮ Categories of chaos and fractal basin boundaries in forced predator-prey models ⋮ Special issue: Chaos in ecology ⋮ A stochastic competing-species model and ergodicity ⋮ The effect of seasonal strength and abruptness on predator-prey dynamics
Cites Work
- Fractal basin boundaries
- Transient chaotic distributions in dissipative systems
- Recurrences and discrete dynamic systems
- Regular and chaotic dynamics.
- Complex dynamics in a model microbial system
- Multiple attractors, catastrophes and chaos in seasonally perturbed predator-prey communities
- Scenarios Leading to Chaos in a Forced Lotka-Volterra Model
- On the Volterra-Lotka principle
- ON THE RELATION BETWEEN THE PRODUCTIVITY, BIOMASS, DIVERSITY, AND STABILITY OF A COMMUNITY
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
This page was built for publication: Weakly dissipative predator-prey systems