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A Free Boundary Problem Modeling the Spread of Ecosystem Engineers

Most models for the spread of an invasive species into a new environment are based on Fisher's reaction-diffusion equation. They assume that habitat quality is independent of the presence or absence of the invading population. Ecosystem engineers are species that modify their environment to make it (more) suitable for them. A potentially more appropriate modeling approach for such an invasive species is to adapt the well-known Stefan problem of melting ice. Ahead of the front, the habitat is unsuitable for the species (the ice); behind the front, the habitat is suitable (the open water). The engineering action of the population moves the boundary ahead (the melting). This approach leads to a free boundary problem.
In this thesis, we mathematically analyze a novel free-boundary model for the spread of ecosystem engineers that was recently derived from an individual random walk model. The Stefan condition for the moving boundary is replaced by a biologically
derived two-sided condition that models the movement behavior of individuals at the boundary as well as the process by which the population moves the boundary to expand their territory.
We first consider the model with logistic growth and study its well-posedness. We
assign a convex functional to this problem so that the evolution system governed
by this convex potential is exactly the system of evolution equations describing the
above model. We then apply variational and fixed-point methods to deal with this
free boundary problem and prove the existence of local in-time solutions.
We next study traveling wave solutions of the model with the strong Allee growth function. We use phase plane analysis to find traveling wave solutions of different types and their corresponding existence range of speed for the model with an imposed
speed of the moving boundary. We then find the speeds in those ranges at which the
corresponding traveling wave follows the speed of the free boundary.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:uottawa.ca/oai:ruor.uottawa.ca:10393/44960
Date17 May 2023
CreatorsBasiri, Maryam
ContributorsLutscher, Frithjof, Momeni, Abbas
PublisherUniversité d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
Source SetsUniversité d’Ottawa
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
Formatapplication/pdf

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