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Asıl Yazarlar: Mooij, M. N., Baudena, M., von der Heydt, A. S., Kryven, I.
Materyal Türü: Preprint
Baskı/Yayın Bilgisi: 2024
Konular:
Online Erişim:https://arxiv.org/abs/2404.14031
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author Mooij, M. N.
Baudena, M.
von der Heydt, A. S.
Kryven, I.
author_facet Mooij, M. N.
Baudena, M.
von der Heydt, A. S.
Kryven, I.
contents The Lotka-Volterra system is a set of ordinary differential equations describing growth of interacting ecological species. This model has gained renewed interest in the context of random interaction networks. One of the debated questions is understanding how the number of species in the system, $n$, influences the stability of the model. Robert May demonstrated that large systems become unstable, unless species-species interactions vanish. This outcome has frequently been interpreted as a universal phenomenon and summarised as "large systems are unstable". However, May's results were performed on a specific type of graphs (Erdős-Rényi), whereas we explore a different class of networks and we show that the competitive Lotka-Volterra system maintains stability even in the limit of large $n$, despite non-vanishing interaction strength. We establish a lower bound on the interspecific interaction strength, formulated in terms of the maximum and minimum degrees of the ecological network, rather than being dependent upon the network's size. For values below this threshold, coexistence of all species is attained in the asymptotic limit. In other words, the outlier nodes with large degree cause instability, rather than the large number of species in the system. Our result refines May's bound, by showing that the type of network model is relevant and can lead to completely different results.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2404_14031
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Stable coexistence in indefinitely large systems of competing species
Mooij, M. N.
Baudena, M.
von der Heydt, A. S.
Kryven, I.
Dynamical Systems
The Lotka-Volterra system is a set of ordinary differential equations describing growth of interacting ecological species. This model has gained renewed interest in the context of random interaction networks. One of the debated questions is understanding how the number of species in the system, $n$, influences the stability of the model. Robert May demonstrated that large systems become unstable, unless species-species interactions vanish. This outcome has frequently been interpreted as a universal phenomenon and summarised as "large systems are unstable". However, May's results were performed on a specific type of graphs (Erdős-Rényi), whereas we explore a different class of networks and we show that the competitive Lotka-Volterra system maintains stability even in the limit of large $n$, despite non-vanishing interaction strength. We establish a lower bound on the interspecific interaction strength, formulated in terms of the maximum and minimum degrees of the ecological network, rather than being dependent upon the network's size. For values below this threshold, coexistence of all species is attained in the asymptotic limit. In other words, the outlier nodes with large degree cause instability, rather than the large number of species in the system. Our result refines May's bound, by showing that the type of network model is relevant and can lead to completely different results.
title Stable coexistence in indefinitely large systems of competing species
topic Dynamical Systems
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2404.14031