Abstract

Bursting behaviors, driven by environmental variability, can substantially influence ecosystem services and functions and have the potential to cause abrupt population breakouts in host–parasitoid systems. We explore the impact of environment on the host–parasitoid interaction by investigating separately the effect of grazing-dependent habitat variation on the host density and the effect of environmental fluctuations on the average host population growth rate. We hence focus on the discrete host–parasitoid Beddington–Free–Lawton model and show that a more comprehensive mathematical study of the dynamics behind the onset of on–off intermittency in host–parasitoid systems may be achieved by considering a deterministic, chaotic system that represents the dynamics of the environment. To this aim, some of the key model parameters are allowed to vary in time according to an evolution law that can exhibit chaotic behavior. Fixed points and stability properties of the resulting 3D nonlinear discrete dynamical system are investigated and on–off intermittency is found to emerge strictly above the blowout bifurcation threshold. We show, however, that, in some cases, this phenomenon can also emerge in the sub-threshold. We hence introduce the novel concept of long-term reactivity and show that it can be considered as a necessary condition for the onset of on–off intermittency. Investigations in the time-dependent regimes and kurtosis maps are provided to support the above results. Our study also suggests how important it is to carefully monitor environmental variability caused by random fluctuations in natural factors or by anthropogenic disturbances in order to minimize its effects on throphic interactions and protect the potential function of parasitoids as biological control agents.

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