Abstract

Predator foraging facilitation or hunting cooperation and the antipredator behavior of prey are essential mechanisms in evolutionary biology and ecology and may strongly influence the predator–prey dynamics. In a real-world scenario, this behavioral tendency is well documented, but less is known about how it could affect the dynamics between predator and prey. Here, we investigate the impact of the fear of predator on prey and the hunting cooperation in predator on the predator–prey dynamics, where the predator is assumed to be of generalist type. We observe that without fear, even with the high level of hunting cooperation, both populations may coexist, though the increasing level of hunting cooperation reduces the prey density at coexistence equilibrium. Moreover, increasing level of fear also destabilizes the system with and without hunting cooperation. Further, in the presence of hunting cooperation and fear effect, the model shows three different types of bistability phenomena: bistability between two coexisting equilibria, bistability between coexisting equilibria and prey-free equilibrium, and bistability between stable limit cycle and coexisting equilibria. In addition, saddle-node, Hopf, transcritical bifurcation of codimension one, Bautin (generalized Hopf), Bogdanov–Takens, and cusp bifurcation of codimension two are observed.

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