Animal migrations are dynamic phenomena that can change rapidly or even be lost entirely over time. In particular, when a migrant population finds favorable conditions in a region, it can settle there permanently. Since biological invasions represent a serious threat to biodiversity, we are interested in determining if and when a marginal contact of a moving population with a territory occupied by other populations is sufficient to trigger an invasion mechanism. The interaction problem of a migrant population with a residential one is considered, where the contact occurs just on the boundary of the region occupied by the native population. To study whether and how the migrants induce changes in the ecosystem subject to their transit, two models are considered. The former accounts only for damage on the native species, with no gain for the migrant population. In the second one, migrants are assumed to be predators and therefore gaining an advantage for survivability. The comparison of the two models’ behaviors gives insights on the invasion process. The theoretical analysis of the two models is complemented by numerical simulations. The models suggest that, even without a direct benefit for the migratory population, these kinds of interactions can have serious ecological consequences for the native population that can even lead to its extinction. Comparing the results, it is instead found that if the migrating species is a predator, even this very reduced interaction on the boundary is enough to trigger invasion and migrants permanently settle in the territory.

Does a marginal contact with a native species living in a complex domain with a fractional dimension boundary represent a sufficient invasive mechanism for the establishment of a migrating population?

Acotto, Francesca
;
Venturino, Ezio;Viscardi, Alberto
2024-01-01

Abstract

Animal migrations are dynamic phenomena that can change rapidly or even be lost entirely over time. In particular, when a migrant population finds favorable conditions in a region, it can settle there permanently. Since biological invasions represent a serious threat to biodiversity, we are interested in determining if and when a marginal contact of a moving population with a territory occupied by other populations is sufficient to trigger an invasion mechanism. The interaction problem of a migrant population with a residential one is considered, where the contact occurs just on the boundary of the region occupied by the native population. To study whether and how the migrants induce changes in the ecosystem subject to their transit, two models are considered. The former accounts only for damage on the native species, with no gain for the migrant population. In the second one, migrants are assumed to be predators and therefore gaining an advantage for survivability. The comparison of the two models’ behaviors gives insights on the invasion process. The theoretical analysis of the two models is complemented by numerical simulations. The models suggest that, even without a direct benefit for the migratory population, these kinds of interactions can have serious ecological consequences for the native population that can even lead to its extinction. Comparing the results, it is instead found that if the migrating species is a predator, even this very reduced interaction on the boundary is enough to trigger invasion and migrants permanently settle in the territory.
2024
184
1
13
Periodic migration, Migratory disturbance, Migrating predator, Residential prey, Marginal interactions, Border fractional dimension, Fractal boundary geometry, Biological invasion, Bistability, bSTAB
Acotto, Francesca; Venturino, Ezio; Viscardi, Alberto
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2318/1981990
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