Contributed Session 3:  Modeling, Math Biology and Math Finance
THE EVOLUTIONARY STABILITY OF PARTIAL MIGRATION WITH ALLEE EFFECTS
Yogesh Trivedi
Birla Institute of Technology and Science, Pilani Goa Campus
India
  Co-Author(s):    Yogesh Trivedi, Ram Singh, Anushaya Mohapatra
  Abstract:
 

An Allee effect is a density-dependent phenomenon in which population growth or individual components of fitness increase as population density increases. Understanding the density-dependent effects is vital to elucidate how populations evolve and to investigate evolutionary stability. Partial migration, where a proportion of a population migrates while other individuals remain resident, is widespread across most migratory lineages. However, the mechanism still needs to be better understood in most taxa, especially those experiencing positive density-dependent effects. Here we will discuss the evolutionary stability of a partial migration population with only the migrant population experiencing Allee effects. Using the Evolutionary Game Theoretic (EGT) approach, we will show the existence and uniqueness of an evolutionary stable strategy (ESS). EGT provides a mathematical framework for understanding and modeling Darwinian evolution by natural selection. We also show that the ESS is the only Ideal Free Distribution (IFD) that arises in the context of a partially migrating population in a two-habitat environment.



Keywords: Partial Migration, Allee Effects, Basic Reproduction Number, Ideal Free Distribution, Evolutionary
Game Theory, Evolutionary Stable Strategy.