Abstract

Competing populations within an ecosystem often release chemicals during the interactions and diffusion processes. These chemicals can have diverse effects on competitors, ranging from inhibition to stimulation of species’ growth. This work constructs a competition model that incorporates stimulatory substances, spatial effects, and multiple time lags to investigate the combined impact of these phenomena on competitors’ growth. When the stimulation rate from the produced chemicals falls within a suitable threshold interval, all species within the system can coexist. Under the species’ coexistence, their diffusive phenomenon leads to a spatially heterogeneous distribution, resulting in patchy structures (Turing patterns) within their habitat. As the parameter values exceed their thresholds, species begin to exhibit spatially periodic oscillations (spatial Hopf bifurcation). The presence of multiple delays and competitors’ diffusion contributes to spatially complex and heterogeneous behaviors (Turing–Hopf bifurcation). The results help us understand the underlying mechanisms behind these heterogeneous behaviors and enable us to mitigate their negative impact on species’ growth and harvest. Numerical simulations are used to measure the dynamics of competitors under different parameter conditions.

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