4.4 Article

The branching process with logistic growth

Journal

ANNALS OF APPLIED PROBABILITY
Volume 15, Issue 2, Pages 1506-1535

Publisher

INST MATHEMATICAL STATISTICS
DOI: 10.1214/105051605000000098

Keywords

size-dependent branching process; continuous-state branching process; population dynamics; logistic process; density dependence; Ornstein-Uhlenbeck type process; Riccati differential equation; fragmentation-coalescence process

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In order to model random density-dependence in population dynamics, we construct the random analogue of the well-known logistic process in the branching process' framework. This density-dependence corresponds to intraspecific competition pressure, which is ubiquitous in ecology, and translates mathematically into a quadratic death rate. The logistic branching process, or LB-process, can thus be seen as (the mass of) a fragmentation process (corresponding to the branching mechanism) combined with constant coagulation rate (the death rate is proportional to the number of possible coalescing pairs). In the continuous state-space setting, the LB-process is a time-changed (in Lamperti's fashion) Ornstein-Uhlenbeck type process. We obtain similar results for both constructions: when natural deaths do not occur, the LB-process converges to a specified distribution; otherwise, it goes extinct a.s. In the latter case, we provide the expectation and the Laplace transform of the absorption time, as a functional of the solution of a Riccati differential equation. We also show that the quadratic regulatory term allows the LB-process to start at infinity, despite the fact that births occur infinitely often as the initial state goes to ∞. This result can be viewed as an extension of the pure-death process starting from infinity associated to Kingman's coalescent, when some independent fragmentation is added.

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