Paper 1, Section II, 6C\mathbf{6 C}

Mathematical Biology
Part II, 2019

An animal population has annual dynamics, breeding in the summer and hibernating through the winter. At year tt, the number of individuals alive who were born a years ago is given by na,tn_{a, t}. Each individual of age aa gives birth to bab_{a} offspring, and after the summer has a probability μa\mu_{a} of dying during the winter. [You may assume that individuals do not give birth during the year in which they are born.]

Explain carefully why the following equations, together with initial conditions, are appropriate to describe the system:

n0,t=a=1na,tbana+1,t+1=(1μa)na,t,\begin{aligned} n_{0, t} &=\sum_{a=1}^{\infty} n_{a, t} b_{a} \\ n_{a+1, t+1} &=\left(1-\mu_{a}\right) n_{a, t}, \end{aligned}

Seek a solution of the form na,t=raγtn_{a, t}=r_{a} \gamma^{t} where γ\gamma and rar_{a}, for a=1,2,3a=1,2,3 \ldots, are constants. Show γ\gamma must satisfy ϕ(γ)=1\phi(\gamma)=1 where

ϕ(γ)=a=1(i=0a1(1μi))γaba\phi(\gamma)=\sum_{a=1}^{\infty}\left(\prod_{i=0}^{a-1}\left(1-\mu_{i}\right)\right) \gamma^{-a} b_{a}

Explain why, for any reasonable set of parameters μi\mu_{i} and bib_{i}, the equation ϕ(γ)=1\phi(\gamma)=1 has a unique solution. Explain also how ϕ(1)\phi(1) can be used to determine if the population will grow or shrink.