ArXiv TLDR

A graph based advection framework for climate-driven species distribution

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2604.05423

Pranali Roy Chowdhury, Soumyendu Raha

math.DSq-bio.PE

TLDR

This paper introduces a graph-based advection framework to model climate-driven species distribution, incorporating directed movement and its impact on persistence and hotspots.

Key contributions

  • Develops a graph-based reaction-diffusion-advection framework for climate-driven species distribution.
  • Models directional species movement induced by environmental gradients, unlike traditional random diffusion.
  • Shows advection creates population hotspots but strong advection increases local extinction risk.
  • Demonstrates how ecological corridor loss disrupts directed flow, forcing species to suboptimal patches.

Why it matters

Most models overlook directed species movement. This framework offers a more realistic approach to understanding how climate change impacts species distribution, hotspot formation, and extinction risk by explicitly modeling advection and network topology.

Original Abstract

Climate change is reshaping species interactions and movement across fragmented landscapes. Despite this, most mathematical models assume random diffusion, overlooking the influence of directed movement. Here, we develop a graph based reaction-diffusion-advection framework explicitly incorporating directional movement induced by environmental gradients. Our results show while diffusion promotes overall population persistence across the network, advective movement induces asymmetric flows. It create population hotspots by directing individuals toward optimal niches, often associated with nodes of high in-degree. We demonstrate the interplay between advection strength and network topology in determining species persistence. Strong advection increase local extinction risk by accumulating populations toward favorable nodes. Additionally, loss of ecological corridors can disrupt directed flow within the network, thereby restricting species from favorable patches. We found that this disruption might not cause immediate extinction, rather forcing species to spread to the suboptimal patches. Our advection framework therefore efficiently captures how directional movement interacting with network topology governs species redistribution, hotspot formation, and predict extinction risk under environmental change.

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