-
Abstract
Noise, through its interaction with the nonlinearity of the living systems, can give rise to counter-intuitive phenomena such as stochastic resonance, noise-delayed extinction, temporal oscillations, and spatial patterns. In this paper we briefly review the noise-induced effects in three different ecosystems: (i) two
competing species; (ii) three interacting species, one predator and two preys, and
(iii) N-interacting species. The transient dynamics of these ecosystems are analyzed through generalized Lotka-Volterra equations in the presence of multiplicative
noise, which models the interaction between the species and the environment. The
interaction parameter between the species is random in cases (i) and (iii), and a
periodical function, which accounts for the environmental temperature, in case (ii).
We find noise-induced phenomena such as quasi-deterministic oscillations, stochastic
resonance, noise-delayed extinction, and noise-induced pattern formation with non-monotonic behaviors of patterns areas and of the density correlation as a function
of the multiplicative noise intensity. The asymptotic behavior of the time average of
the$ i^{th}$
population when the ecosystem is composed of a great number of interacting
species is obtained and the effect of the noise on the asymptotic probability distri-
butions of the populations is discussed.
Mathematics Subject Classification: 82Cxx,92D25.
\begin{equation} \\ \end{equation}
-
Access History
-