Abstract

<abstract><p>As a renewable resource, biological population not only has direct economic value to people's lives, but also has important ecological and environmental value. This study examines an optimal harvesting problem for a periodic, competing hybrid system of three species that is dependent on size structure in a polluted environment. The existence and uniqueness of the nonnegative solution are proved via an operator theory and fixed point theorem. The necessary optimality conditions are derived by constructing an adjoint system and using the tangent-normal cone technique. The existence of unique optimal control pair is verified by means of the Ekeland variational principle and a feedback form of the optimal policy is presented. The finite difference scheme and the chasing method are used to approximate the nonnegative T-periodic solution of the state system corresponding to a given initial datum. The objective functional represents the total profit obtained from harvesting three species. The results obtained in this work can be extended to a wide variety of fields.</p></abstract>

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