Abstract:
Mathematical modeling of spatial ecological systems has signi cantly contributed
to our understanding of population dynamics, species distribution across space,
collective behavior, and ecological stability. The theory of dynamical systems and
diverse numerical methods are instrumental in studying spatial population models.
In this thesis, we study various mathematical models of spatial ecological systems
to understand the e ect of demographic and environmental stochasticity, dispersal
network topology, species movement patterns, and arrangement of landscape on
ecosystem dynamics.
Noise-induced symmetry breaking has barely been unveiled on ecological grounds,
though its occurrence may elucidate mechanisms responsible for maintaining
biodiversity and ecosystem stability. We study an ecological network model and
demonstrate that the interplay of network structure and noise intensity manifests a
transition from homogeneous steady state to inhomogeneous steady states, resulting
in noise-induced symmetry breaking. Further, we move beyond dyadic couplings
and consider the higher-order species interactions in an ecological network. We
study the synchrony patterns and observe that higher-order interactions bring about
signi cant changes in collective behavior compared to the conventional pairwise
interaction. We also nd the region where the synchronous state is stable using
the master stability function. The ability of species to move between fragmented
landscapes is an essential factor in ascertaining the dynamics and spatial distribution
of populations. Further, the e ect of resource pulses on ecological processes due
to environmental variation in the context of foraging strategies remains largely
unexplored. Considering resource pulses, we analyze the uni ed impact of foraging
behavior and species life-history traits on the structure and dynamics of ecosystems.
We nd that a Levy walk is consistently e ective as a movement strategy. We also
nd that the optimal foraging behavior shifts from Brownian to ballistic as the
mortality rate of grazers increases. In addition, our study comprehends how climate
warming and spatial separation between habitat patches inuence species collective
dynamics. We nd that rising habitat temperature has the potential to destabilize
ecological dynamics, and density-dependent species dispersal can mitigate these
adverse e ects. Moreover, long-range dispersal works out as the driving force for
species persistence in extreme temperature conditions of habitat.