4.7 Article

Controlling species densities in structurally perturbed intransitive cycles with higher-order interactions

Journal

CHAOS
Volume 32, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

AIP Publishing
DOI: 10.1063/5.0102599

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. CSIR
  2. Department of Science and Technology, Government of India
  3. INSPIRE-Faculty grant
  4. [09/093(0194)/2020-EMR-I]
  5. [NMICPS/006/MD/2020-21]
  6. [IFA17-PH193]

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This article explores the impact of higher-order interactions on the evolution of social phenotypes and presents a new perspective for understanding this phenomenon. The study shows that perturbations have a significant influence on the coexistence equilibrium of competing species and can lead to the system being split into multiple feasible cluster states, depending on the number of perturbations.
The persistence of biodiversity of species is a challenging proposition in ecological communities in the face of Darwinian selection. The present article investigates beyond the pairwise competitive interactions and provides a novel perspective for understanding the influence of higher-order interactions on the evolution of social phenotypes. Our simple model yields a prosperous outlook to demonstrate the impact of perturbations on intransitive competitive higher-order interactions. Using a mathematical technique, we show how alone the perturbed interaction network can quickly determine the coexistence equilibrium of competing species instead of solving a large system of ordinary differential equations. It is possible to split the system into multiple feasible cluster states depending on the number of perturbations. Our analysis also reveals the ratio between the unperturbed and perturbed species is inversely proportional to the amount of employed perturbation. Our results suggest that nonlinear dynamical systems and interaction topologies can be interplayed to comprehend species' coexistence under adverse conditions. Particularly our findings signify that less competition between two species increases their abundance and outperforms others.

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