In drylands, water availability determines plant population densities and whether they cooperate via facilitation or compete. When water scarcity intensifies, plant densities decrease and competition for water surpasses the benefits of soil improvement by facilitator plants, involving an abrupt shift from facilitation to competition. Here, we model this facilitation–competition shift using a piecewise system in a resource species such as grasses studying its impact on a resource-consumer dynamical system. First, the dynamics of each system i.e., competitive and cooperative, are introduced separately for this resource-consumer system. The competitive system, by setting conditions to have a monodromic equilibrium in the first quadrant, has no limit cycles. With a monodromy condition in the same quadrant, the cooperative system only has a hyperbolic, small amplitude limit cycle, allowing for an oscillating coexistence. The dynamic properties of the piecewise system become richer. We here prove the extension of the center-focus problem in this particular case, and from a weak focus of order three, we find 3 limit cycles arising from it. We also study the case assuming continuity in the piecewise system. Finally, we present a special and restricted way of obtaining a limit cycle of small amplitude in a pseudo-Hopf bifurcation type. Our results suggest that abrupt density-dependent functional shifts, such as those described in drylands, could introduce novel dynamical phenomena in population dynamis. Our work also provides a novel theoretical framework to model and investigate population dynamics where ecological interactions change due to density-dependent effects.
Inglés
Centre-focus; Drylands; Ecological functional shifts; Kolmogorov systems; Limit cycles; Lyapunov quantities; Plant-plant interactions; Theoretical Ecology; Weak focus order
11 p.
Elsevier
Physica D: Nonlinear Phenomena
CRM Articles [656]