Response of Predator-Prey Systems to Nutrient Enrichment and Proportional Harvesting.
Abstract
A predator-prey system is modelled by a pair of ordinary differential equations, and the qualitative effects of prey nutrient enrichment and predator harvesting at a rate proportional to the predator population size are studied. Some theoretical analysis concerning the stability of equilibrium points and the existence of stable limit cycles is included. Three models are examined as examples, and for two of them computer simulations are included to illustrate the changes in qualitative behavior under nutrient enrichment and increase of harvesting effort. The essential difference between this study and our previous work on constant rate harvesting (Brauer, Soudack, and Jarosch, 1976) is that here, extinction of predators in finite time is impossible although the predator population may tend to zero as t yields infinity. Also extinction of predators is much less sensitive to changes of harvesting effort than for constant rate harvesting. (Author)
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Aug 01, 1976
- Accession Number
- ADA031940
Entities
People
- A. C. Soudack
- F. Brauer
Organizations
- University of Wisconsin–Madison