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Journal ArticleDOI

A survey on stably dissipative Lotka-Volterra systems with an application to infinite dimensional Volterra equations

01 Apr 2014-Publicacions Matematiques (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Departament de Matemàtiques)-Vol. 58, pp 421-452
TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that for stably dissipative Lotka-Volterra equations, the dynamics on the attractor are Hamiltonian and complex dynamics can occur.
Abstract: For stably dissipative Lotka{Volterra equations the dynamics on the attractor are Hamiltonian and we argue that complex dynamics can occur. We also present examples and properties of some infinite dimensional Volterra systems with applications related with stably dissipative Lotka-Volterra equations. We finish by mentioning recent contributions on the subject.

Summary (2 min read)

1. Introduction

  • He investigated in considerably detail the association of two species, one of which (the predator) feeds on the other (the prey) and for this case the authors have the nowadays called Lotka–Volterra equations (see [29, p. 14, eq(4)]).
  • The dynamics of systems of type (1) are far from understood, although special classes of these Lotka–Volterra systems have been studied.
  • While seeking a variational principle for the system, he was successful in finding a Hamiltonian formulation in the case where the interaction matrix is skew-symmetric, at the expense of doubling the number of dimensions (see Section 2 for details).
  • It was already observed in [23] that there may exist periodic orbits on (non-trivial) attractors.

2. Basic notions

  • Here, the authors will recall some basic notions and facts concerning general Lotka–Volterra systems which will be useful in the next sections.
  • For a more detailed account of general properties of Lotka–Volterra systems the authors refer to the book by Hofbauer and Sigmund [9].
  • Similarly, to exclude α-limit points one uses the Liapunov function −V .
  • On the other hand, the following result shows that the average behavior of the orbits is related to the values of the fixed points (see [2]).

3. Conservative systems

  • In the case were system (1) is conservative Volterra was able to introduce a Hamiltonian structure for the system by doubling the number of variables.
  • The authors recall now Volterra’s construction, so they assume that system (1) is conservative and a choice of gauge has been made so that the matrix (ajk) is skew-symmetric.
  • The full justification of this procedure will be given later in the section.
  • Now, if one introduces another set of variables Recall that the modern approach to Hamiltonian systems is based on the following generalization of the notion of a Poisson bracket (see for example [1], [17]).

4. Dissipative systems

  • Since the authors want their results to persist under small perturbation they introduce the following definition.
  • Note that the authors only allow perturbations that have the same graph as the original system.
  • Also they use instead the name stably admissible.
  • For stably dissipative systems this choice can be improved [24]: Lemma 4.2.
  • It will be convenient to modify slightly the notion of graph associated with the system the authors introduced above.

5. Examples

  • Example 5.1. In [3, p. 159, eq. (33)], the authors give a detailed analysis of a 4-dimensional Lotka–Volterra system in order to illustrate the complexity of the dynamics that can occur on the attractor.
  • These equations were extensively analysed by Duarte, Fernandes and Oliva in [3] where the flow generated by (51) was discussed using a reduction procedure to establish the existence of invariant sets with a Hamiltonian structure.
  • Theorem 5. Consider the system of Lotka–Volterra equations (61) coupled with the linear equations (62) and assume that: (i) the Lotka– Volterra system (61) has a singular point q ∈ Rm+ ; and, (ii) the interaction matrix A is stably dissipative.
  • The paper [31] by Zhao and Luo proves necessary and sufficient conditions for a matrix to be stably dissipative.

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Publ. Mat. (2014), 421–452
Proceedings of New Trends in Dynamical Systems. Salou, 2012.
DOI: 10.5565/PUBLMAT Extra14 21
A SURVEY ON STABLY DISSIPATIVE
LOTKA–VOLTERRA SYSTEMS WITH AN
APPLICATION TO INFINITE DIMENSIONAL
VOLTERRA EQUATIONS
Waldyr M. Oliva
The present paper is dedicated to Jaume Llibre, Luis Magalh˜aes and
Carlos Rocha, on the occasion of their 60th birthdays
Abstract: For stably dissipative Lotka–Volterra equations the dynamics on the at-
tractor are Hamiltonian and we argue that complex dynamics can occur. We also
present examples and properties of some infinite dimensional Volterra systems with
applications related with stably dissipative Lotka–Volterra equations. We finish by
mentioning recent contributions on the subject.
2010 Mathematics Subject Classification: 34C25, 34K15.
Key words: Lotka–Volterra, stably dissipative systems, conservative systems, Pois-
son manifolds, reducible systems.
1. Introduction
Lotka–Volterra systems were introduced in the 1920s by A. J. Lot-
ka [12] and V. Volterra [27] independently of one another in areas of
chemistry and interaction of populations, respectively.
Volterra’s researches in this field was strongly stimulated by conver-
sations with the biologist Umberto D’Ancona from Siena. He investi-
gated in considerably detail the association of two species, one of which
(the predator) feeds on the other (the prey) and for this case we have
the nowadays called Lotka–Volterra equations (see [29, p. 14, eq(4)]).
Volterra’s concern, however, was with associations of n 2 species, and
hence with the same number n of differential equations. So, Volterra
introduced the following system as a model for the competition of n bi-
ological species
(1) ˙x
j
= ε
j
x
j
+
n
X
k=1
a
jk
x
j
x
k
, j = 1, . . . , n.

422 W. M. Oliva
In this model, x
j
represents the number of individuals of species j
(so one assumes x
j
> 0), the a
jk
’s are the interaction coefficients, and
the ε
j
’s are parameters that depend on the environment. For example,
ε
j
> 0 means that species j is able to increase with food from the envi-
ronment, while ε
j
< 0 means that it cannot survive when left alone in
the environment. One can also have ε
j
= 0 which means that the popu-
lation stays constant if the species does not interact. This system (1) of
differential equations is also called a Lotka–Volterra system.
In [28] Volterra considered a more general type of equation where
some memory functions play the role of hereditary phenomena; hered-
itary here means, for instance, time of incubation or time of gestation
of the female predator. When two individuals meet and one eats the
other, the population of preys decreases immediately; on the other hand
the population of predators takes a while to increase. This delay is
interpreted as a constant number r > 0 that appears in the system of
equations (see (2)) and it is well known that we are dealing with retarded
functional differential equations (RFDEs). In [5] we see the foundations
and main results of the RFDEs. In particular, they define a flow in an in-
finite dimensional phase space. These more general equations introduced
by Volterra are the following:
(2) ˙x
j
(t) = x
j
(t)
"
ε
j
+
m
X
k=1
a
jk
x
k
(t) +
m
X
k=1
Z
0
r
x
k
(t + θ)F
jk
(θ)
#
,
where ε
j
, a
jk
are constants and x
j
= x
j
(t) > 0, for j, k = 1, . . . , m,
and F
jk
(θ) are the memory functions; the constant r, 0 < r , is
called the lag or delay of the equation. See [15] and [14] for cases where
0 < r < and r = , respectively.
The dynamics of systems of type (1) are far from understood, although
special classes of these Lotka–Volterra systems have been studied. We
distinguish the following classes of systems of this type:
Definition 1.1. A Lotka–Volterra system with interaction matrix A =
(a
ij
) is called
(i) cooperative (resp. competitive) if a
jk
0 (resp. a
jk
0) for
all j 6= k;
(ii) conservative if there exists a diagonal matrix D > 0 such that
AD is skew-symmetric;
(iii) dissipative if there exists a diagonal matrix D > 0 such that
AD 0.

Survey on Lotka–Volterra 423
Competitive systems and dissipative systems are mutually exclusive
classes, except for the trivial case where a
jk
= 0. General results con-
cerning competitive or cooperative systems were obtained by Smale [26]
and Hirsch [7, 8] (for recent results see [30] and references therein).
These systems typically have a global attractor consisting of equilibria
and connections between them (see e. g. [7, Theorem 1.7]).
Dissipative systems have been less studied than competitive systems,
although this class of systems goes back to the pioneer work of Volterra,
who introduced them as a natural generalization of predator-prey sys-
tems (see [29, Chapter III]). For systems where predators and preys co-
exist there is empirical and numerical evidence that periodic oscillations
occur. In fact, as it is well known, for any two dimensional predator-
prey system, the orbits are periodic. But for higher dimensional systems
the topology of orbits in phase space is much more complex, and under-
standing this topology is a challenging problem. The following theorem
(see [3]) is perhaps the first result in this direction.
Theorem 1.2. Consider a Lotka–Volterra system (1) restricted to the
flow invariant set R
n
+
{(x
1
, . . . , x
n
) R
n
: x
j
> 0, j = 1, . . . , n},
and assume that (i) the system has a singular point, and (ii) is stably
dissipative. Then there exists a global attractor and the dynamics on the
attractor are Hamiltonian.
By “stably dissipative” we mean that the system is dissipative and
every system close to it is also dissipative. As we mentioned before,
the notion of dissipative system is due to Volterra. Stably dissipative
systems where first studied by Redheffer and collaborators (see [21, 22,
23, 24, 25]) under the name “stably admissible”. They gave a beautiful
description of the attractor (see Section 4 below) which we will use to
prove Theorem 1.2. The hypothesis on the existence of a singular point
is equivalent to the assumption that some orbit has a α- or ω-limit point
in R
n
+
.
One of Volterra’s main goals in introducing these equations was the
“mechanization” of biology, and he made quite an effort in trying to
pursue this program. While seeking a variational principle for the sys-
tem, he was successful in finding a Hamiltonian formulation in the case
where the interaction matrix is skew-symmetric, at the expense of dou-
bling the number of dimensions (see Section 2 for details). Along the
way, a polemic with Levi-Civita arose, an account of which can be found
in [10]. In this paper we shall give a different solution to the problem
of putting system (1) into a Hamiltonian frame. In modern language,
our approach is related to Volterra’s approach by a reduction procedure.

424 W. M. Oliva
This Hamiltonian frame is the basis for the Hamiltonian structure refered
to in Theorem 1.2.
Once the Hamiltonian character of the dynamics is established, one
would like to understand (i) what type of attractors one can get and
(ii) what kind of Hamiltonian dynamics one can have on the attractor.
It will follow from our work that this amounts to classify the dynamics
of Lotka–Volterra systems with skew-symmetric matrix whose associated
graph is a forest. We do not know of such classification but we shall argue
that these dynamics can be rather complex.
In the simplest situation, the attractor will consist of the unique fixed
point in R
n
+
and the dynamics will be trivial. It was already observed
in [23] that there may exist periodic orbits on (non-trivial) attractors.
On the other hand, if the attractor is an integrable Hamiltonian system
then one can expect the orbits to be almost periodic. As we will see be-
low, through a detailed study of a 4-dimensional chain of predator-prey
systems, non-integrable Hamiltonian system can indeed occur. There-
fore, typically, the dynamics of dissipative Lotka–Volterra systems are
extremely complex. This is related with a famous conjecture in the the-
ory of Hamiltonian systems which can be stated as follows (see [20, 17]):
Typically, dynamics on the common level sets of the Hamil-
tonian and the Casimirs are ergodic.
This survey is organized in two parts. In the first part we deal with
basic notions of general systems of type (1) and prove Theorem 1.2. In
the second part we present some examples and also applications of the
stably dissipative systems to Volterra’s systems of type (2), with and
without delays. We finish by mentioning some recent contributions on
the subject.
Part I. General Theory
2. Basic notions
Here, we will recall some basic notions and facts concerning general
Lotka–Volterra systems which will be useful in the next sections. All
of these notions can be traced back to Volterra. For a more detailed
account of general properties of Lotka–Volterra systems we refer to the
book by Hofbauer and Sigmund [9].
For fixed d
j
6= 0, the transformation
(3) y
j
=
1
d
j
x
j
, j = 1, . . . , n,

Survey on Lotka–Volterra 425
takes the Volterra system (1) with interaction matrix A, into a new
Volterra system with interaction matrix AD
(4) ˙y
j
= ε
j
y
j
+
n
X
k=1
d
k
a
jk
y
j
y
k
, j = 1, . . . , n.
We can therefore think of (3) as a gauge symmetry of the system. A
choice of representative (a
jk
) in a class of equivalence under gauge trans-
formations will be called a choice of gauge. Since will often take as phase
space R
n
+
, we consider only gauge transformations with d
j
> 0 in order
to preserve phase space. Note also that the classes of Lotka–Volterra
systems introduced in Definition 1.1 above are all gauge invariant.
Many properties of a Lotka–Volterra system can be expressed geo-
metrically in terms of its associated graph G(A, ε). This is the labeled
graph, where with each species j we associate a vertex
f
labeled with ε
j
and we draw an edge connecting vertex j to vertex k whenever a
jk
6= 0.
ε
5
f
ε
4
f
ε
8
f
f
ε
1
f
ε
2
f
ε
3
f
ε
6
f
ε
7
f
ε
9
Figure 1. Graph G(A, ε) associated with a system of
type (1).
For example, if two systems are gauge equivalent, they have the same
unlabeled graph (but not conversely). Also, conservative systems can
be caracterized in terms of its graph as it follows from the following
proposition also due to Volterra [29, Chapter III, §12]:
Proposition 2.1. A Lotka–Volterra system with interaction matrix A =
(a
jk
) is conservative if, and only if, a
jj
= 0,
(5) a
jk
6= 0 = a
jk
a
kj
< 0, j 6= k,
and
(6) a
i
1
i
2
a
i
2
i
3
· · · a
i
s
i
1
= (1)
s
a
i
s
i
s1
· · · a
i
2
i
1
a
i
1
i
s
for every finite sequence of integers (i
1
, . . . , i
s
), with i
r
{1, . . . , n} for
r = 1, . . . , s.

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References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: For the class of stably dissipative Lotka-Volterra systems, the rank of the defining matrix, which is the dimension of the associated invariant foliation, is completely determined by the system's graph.

6 citations

Dissertation
01 Jan 2010
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focus mainly on dissipative systems, namely in the study of properties and examples of stably dissipative system, and attempt to explore an algorithm developed in 1980 by Redheffer et al. acting in the graph of the interaction matrix system.
Abstract: Lotka-Volterra systems were introduced in the 1920s by Lotka and Volterra independently of one another when they began to publish studies on systems of differential equations in areas of chemistry and interaction of populations, respectively. These systems are generally classified into three groups: competitive (or cooperative) systems, conservative systems and dissipative systems. Within the class of dissipative systems can be considered the stably dissipative systems, which are characterized by being dissipative systems that maintain their properties even when disturbed. The present work focuses mainly on dissipative systems, namely in the study of properties and examples of stably dissipative systems. We attempt to explore an algorithm developed in 1980 by Redheffer et al. acting in the graph of the interaction matrix system. Finally we discuss some ideas related to the dynamics of such systems and present some examples. Key-words: Lotka-Volterra system, differential equation, dynamical system, conservative system, dissipative system, stably dissipative system, attractor.

3 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: In this article, a cut-off technique was applied to Volterra models of retarded type, combined with a Kurzweil's theorem, in order to describe global bounded solutions as solutions of an ordinary differential equation.
Abstract: A “cut-off” technique for retarded functional differential equations is applied to Volterra models of retarded type, combined with a Kurzweil’s theorem, in order to describe global bounded solutions as solutions of an ordinary differential equation. The existence of periodic orbits and a description of the behavior near the equilibrium are also obtained. 1 – Introduction In his famous book Leçons sur la théorie mathématique de la lutte pour la vie [6] Volterra considered a system of retarded functional differential equations (RFDE) in order to describe the hereditary interaction of n species; hereditary here means, for instance, time of incubation or time of gestation of the female predator. When two individuals meet and one eats the other, the population of preys decreases immediately; on the other hand the population of predators takes a while to increase. This delay is interpreted as a constant lag r > 0 that appears in the system of RFDE for n species (see equations (4.1)) or the special case of two species (equations (4.14)). In this last case, if we make δ1 = 0 and δ2 > 0 one intends to give a meaning for the instantaneous effect of predation on the population of preys and the time lag affects only the predators’ population. Of course δ1 > 0 and δ2 > 0 also has to be considered; these two cases were studied with some detail along the paper. Received : January 1, 1996; Revised : September 5, 1996. 1991 Mathematics Subject Classification: 34K15, 38F32. 166 W.M. OLIVA and P.Z. TÁBOAS In Section 2 we gave emphasis to a smooth “cut-off” technique for RFDE’s. In Section 3, for completeness, we stated Theorem 3.1, a theorem by Kurzweil that describes, under certain hypotheses, the global solutions of a RFDE as solutions of an ODE. In Section 4 we combined the appropriated smooth “cut-off” technique to adapt the Volterra system (4.1) to the hypotheses of the Kurzweil’s result and obtained Theorem 4.1; the RFDE to be considered corresponds to a small perturbation of an ODE system. The use of Theorem 4.1 depends strongly on the existence of a compact set Γ, invariant under the flow of the unperturbed ODE system. Theorem 4.2 is applied to the case of two species and proves the existence of r-periodic orbits for system (4.14), under suitable general conditions on the parameters of the system. Remarks 4.3, 4.4 as well as Theorem 4.5 are corollaries of Theorem 4.2. Remark 4.6 treats system (4.14) for the case δ1 = 0, δ2 > 0 and Theorems 4.7, 4.8 show that the behavior of the flow can be better understood looking to the other possible periodic orbits with minimum period r/k, k > 1 integer. We finish Section 4 with an example of a system with four species obtained as the product of two systems with two species; this procedure leads to a RFDE on a torus T 2. Section 5 studies the behavior of the solutions in a neighbohood of the equilibrium in the case of two species. Theorem 5.1 shows that the equilibrium is generically hyperbolic, Corollary 5.3 and Theorem 5.4 study the special cases δ1 = 0, δ2 > 0 and δ1 = δ2 = δ > 0, respectively. Corollary 5.5 shows that Hopf bifurcation occurs in this last case. 2 – “cut-off” functions Let B1 and B2 be the closures of two bounded convex open sets in R with smooth boundaries, ∂B1 ⊂ int(B2). It is well known that there exists a C function Φ: R → R such that (2.1) Φ(x) = { 1 on B1, 0 on R\\B2 , 0 ≤ Φ(x) ≤ 1, otherwise. We easily construct Φ if B1 and B2 are choosen as closed balls centered at the origin, with radii r1 and r2, respectively, r1 < r2. From now on B1 and B2 will be such balls. One starts with a C function α : R → R such that α(s) = 0, for s ≥ r2 − r1, α(s) = 1, for s ≤ 0 and 0 ≤ α(s) ≤ 1, for 0 < s < r2 − r1; then we define (2.2) Φ(x) = α (

2 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the existence of a compact set of vertices invariant under the flow of a Volterra system of retarded equations with lag r > 0 is proved, which is homeomorphic to a solid tri-dimensional cylinder.
Abstract: It is proved the existence of a compact set \( {\cal K} \), invariant under the flow of a Volterra system of retarded equations on \( {\Bbb R}^3_+ \), with lag r > 0; \({\cal K}\) is homeomorphic to a solid tri-dimensional cylinder. The boundary \(\partial {\cal K}\) of \({\cal K}\) is the union of a closed bi-dimensional cylinder \({\cal C ({\cal K})}\) with two open disks (the two basis of the cylinder \({\cal K}\)). \({\cal C ({\cal K})}\) is the union of a continuous one-parameter family of r-periodic orbits of the retarded Volterra system and any r-periodic orbit of the retarded system is contained in \({\cal K}\). The flow, restricted to \({\cal K}\), of the system of retarded equations, is the flow of a C1-vector-field.

1 citations


"A survey on stably dissipative Lotk..." refers background or methods in this paper

  • ...See [15] and [14] for cases where 0 < r <∞ and r =∞, respectively....

    [...]

  • ...This example shows that the authors in [15] decided to keep themselves with a Volterra RFDEs of the type (36) in the case of n = 3 species because is still possible to give a geometric description of a set of global bounded solutions, due, mainly, to the Poisson integrability (see [3]) of two associated 3-dimensional Lotka–Volterra ODE systems....

    [...]

  • ...As one can see in [15], it is possible to show that the r-periodic solutions of (37) inside ∂K are also solutions of an auxiliary 3-dimensional Lotka–Volterra system....

    [...]

  • ...1 of [15], that can be stated in the following way: Theorem....

    [...]

Frequently Asked Questions (1)
Q1. What have the authors contributed in "A survey on stably dissipative lotka–volterra systems with an application to infinite dimensional volterra equations" ?

The authors also present examples and properties of some infinite dimensional Volterra systems with applications related with stably dissipative Lotka–Volterra equations.