Paper 4, Section I, B
A neglected flower garden contains marigolds in the summer of year . On average each marigold produces seeds through the summer. Seeds may germinate after one or two winters. After three winters or more they will not germinate. Each winter a fraction of all seeds in the garden are eaten by birds (with no preference to the age of the seed). In spring a fraction of seeds that have survived one winter and a fraction of seeds that have survived two winters germinate. Finite resources of water mean that the number of marigolds growing to maturity from germinating seeds is , where is an increasing function such that is a decreasing function of and as
Show that satisfies the equation
Write down an equation for the number of marigolds in a steady state. Show graphically that there are two solutions, one with and the other with if
Show that the steady-state solution is unstable to small perturbations in this case.