Abstract

We study an integral-differential equation that models a pure birth-jump process, where birth and dispersal cannot be decoupled. A case has been made that these processes are more suitable for phenomena such as plant dynamics, fire propagation, and cancer cell dynamics. We contrast the dynamics of this equation with those of the classical reaction-diffusion equation, where the reaction term models either logistic growth or a strong Allee effect. Recent evidence of an Allee effect has been found in plant dynamics during the germination process (due to seed predation) but not in the generation of seeds. This motivates where the Allee effect is included in our model. We prove the global existence and uniqueness of solutions with bounded initial data and analyze some properties of the solutions. Additionally, we prove results related to the persistence or extinction of a species, which are analogous to those of the classical reaction-diffusion equation. A key finding is that in some cases a population which is initially below the Allee threshold in some area, even if small, will actually survive. This is in contrast to solutions of the classical reaction-diffusion with the same initial data. Another difference of note is the lack of regularization and an infinite number of discontinuous equilibrium solutions to the birth-jump model.

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