Population spread in patchy landscapes under a strong Allee effect
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Résumé
Many species of invasive insects establish and
spread in regions around the world, causing enormous eco-
nomical and environmental damage, in particular in forests.
Some of these insects are subject to an Allee effect whereby
the population must surpass a certain threshold in order
to establish. Recent studies have examined the possibility
of exploiting an Allee effect to improve existing control
strategies. Forests and most other ecosystems show natural
spatial variation, and human activities frequently increase
the degree of spatial heterogeneity. It is therefore imperative
to understand how the interplay between this spatial varia-
tion and individual movement behavior affects the overall
speed of spread of an invasion. To this end, we study an
integrodifference equation model in a patchy landscape and
with Allee growth dynamics. Movement behavior of indi-
viduals varies according to landscape quality. Our study
focuses on how the speed of the resulting traveling periodic
wave depends on the interaction between landscape frag-
mentation, patch-dependent dispersal, and Allee population
dynamics.
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Mots-clés
Population spread, Allee effect, Patchy landscape
Citation
Theoretical Ecology 8(3): 313--216
