Abstract

In this work, we have studied the spatiotemporal dynamics of a predator–prey model with selective nonlinear saturated harvesting of both species. The study of the non-diffusive system includes analytical and numerical analysis of local and global bifurcations. Bifurcation analysis of the non-diffusive system unveils that the system may exhibit transcritical, Hopf, saddle–node and homoclinic bifurcation with increased carrying capacity and harvesting efforts. The simulation results further reveal that the paradox of enrichment may disappear in a harvested system for a higher value of carrying capacity. The spatiotemporal study consists of an analysis of different pattern-forming instabilities. A critical ratio of the diffusivities of predator to prey for the occurrence of Turing instability is established. Further, a weakly nonlinear analysis is provided to derive the amplitude equation and predict the form of the pattern. The key highlight of the work is that prey harvesting facilitates spatiotemporal chaos, and predator diffusion controls it. Furthermore, intensive prey harvesting forces spatial segregation, whereas predator harvesting relaxes it. It is also observed that spatial segregation enriches the overall species biomass. A unique observation of this study is the occurrence and nonoccurrence of spatiotemporal chaos in the Hopf-Turing parametric space.

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