The fate of complex ecologies: How do species organize? An exact method

ORAL

Abstract

Complex ecology models present a bridge between far from equilibrium physics and biology of populations. The May-Leonard, Rock-Paper-Scissor and Lotka-Volterra models have been extensively studied in an attempt to understand the dynamics of finite but large populations. In this talk we present a new theoretical technique which predicts the dynamics of these models for any complex ecology with interactions similar to the aforementioned models. This method has applications to real-world systems as it presents a simple method to predict correlations among two or more species in a complex ecology. We apply this method to the models mentioned and show that exact agreement between predictions and Monte-Carlo simulation data is obtained. This method could be applied to a wide variety of problems from economics to biology and game theory.

*This work is supported by the US National Science Foundation through grant DMR-1205309.

Authors

  • Ahmed Roman

    • Virginia Tech
  • Michel Pleimling

    • Department of Physics, VA Tech
    • Virginia Tech
    • Virgina Tech