Population Dynamics in a Changing Environment: Random versus Periodic Switching

Statistical Physics and Complexity Group meeting

Population Dynamics in a Changing Environment: Random versus Periodic Switching

  • Event time: 11:30am until 12:30pm
  • Event date: 21st April 2021
  • Speaker: (The Racah Institute of Physics)
  • Location: Online - see email

Event details

Environmental changes greatly influence the evolution of populations. Here, we study the dynamics of a population of two strains, one growing slightly faster than the other, competing for resources in a time-varying binary environment modeled by a carrying capacity switching either randomly or periodically between states of abundance and scarcity. The population dynamics is characterized by demographic noise (birth and death events) coupled to a varying environment. We elucidate the similarities and differences of the evolution subject to a stochastically and periodically varying environment. Importantly, the population size distribution is generally found to be broader under intermediate and fast random switching than under periodic variations, which results in markedly different asymptotic behaviors between the fixation probability of random and periodic switching. We also determine the detailed conditions under which the fixation probability of the slow strain is maximal.

Relevant Publications:

1. Ami Taitelbaum, Robert West, Michael Assaf, and Mauro Mobilia, „Population Dynamics in a Changing Environment: Random versus Periodic Switching “, Phys. Rev. Lett. 125, 048105 (2020)

2. Karl Wienand, Erwin Frey, and Mauro Mobilia, „Evolution of a Fluctuating Population in a Randomly Switching Environment “, Phys. Rev. Lett. 119, 158301 (2017)