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JOURNALS // Computer Research and Modeling // Archive

Computer Research and Modeling, 2022 Volume 14, Issue 5, Pages 1107–1130 (Mi crm1021)

This article is cited in 3 papers

ANALYSIS AND MODELING OF COMPLEX LIVING SYSTEMS

Harvesting impact on population dynamics with age and sex structure: optimal harvesting and the hydra effect

O. L. Revutskaya, E. Ya. Frisman

Institute for Complex Analysis of Regional Problems, Far Eastern Branch of RAS, 4 Sholom-Aleikhem st., Birobidzhan, 679016, Russia

Abstract: Based on the time-discrete model, we study the effect of selective proportional harvesting on the population dynamics with age and sex structure. When constructing the model, we assume that the population birth rate depends on the ratio of the sexes and the number of formed pairs. The regulation of population growth is carried out by limiting the juvenile's survival when the survival of immature individuals decreases with an increase in the numbers of sex and age classes. We consider cases where the harvest is carried out only from a younger age class or from a group of mature females or males. We find that the harvesting of males or females at the optimal level is responsible for changing the ratio of females to males (taking into account the average size of the harem). We show that the maximum number of harvested males is achieved either at such a harvest rate when their excess number is withdrawn and the balance of sexes is established or at such an optimal catch quota at which the sex ratio is shifted towards breeding females. Optimal female harvesting, in which the highest number of them are taken, either maintains a preexisting shortage of adult males or leads to an excess of males or the fixing of a sex balance. We find that, depending on the population parameters for all considered harvesting strategies, the hydra effect can observe, i. e., the equilibrium size of the exploited sex and age-specific group (after reproduction) can increase with the growth of harvesting intensity. The selective harvesting, due to which the hydra effect occurs, simultaneously leads to an increase remaining population size and the number of harvested individuals. At the same time, the size of the exploited group after reproduction can become even more than without exploitation. Equilibrium harvesting with the optimal harvest rate that maximizes yield leads to a population size decrease. The effect of hydra is at lower values of the catch quota than the optimal harvest rate. At the same time, the consequence of the hydra effect may be a higher abundance of the age-sex group under optimal exploitation compared to the level observed in the absence of harvesting.

Keywords: discrete-time model, age and sex structure, density-dependent regulation, harvest, stability, hydra effect.

UDC: 51-76:574.34

Received: 06.06.2022
Accepted: 05.07.2022

DOI: 10.20537/2076-7633-2022-14-5-1107-1130



© Steklov Math. Inst. of RAS, 2024