"Predator and prey" model revisited -- influence of external fluxes and noise
Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 01:03 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Adding constant external fluxes and noise to kinetic coefficients modifies the dynamics of the predator-prey model.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The central claim is that introducing regular external fluxes at constant rates for predators or preys, together with noise in the kinetic coefficients, constitutes natural modifications that meaningfully change the time evolution of the predator-prey system compared with the original deterministic closed model.
What carries the argument
Modified Lotka-Volterra differential equations that incorporate additive constant flux terms and multiplicative or additive noise on the interaction rates.
If this is right
- External flux terms shift the location of equilibrium points away from the classic ratio of death and birth rates.
- Noise in coefficients converts deterministic oscillations into stochastic processes whose variance grows with time or saturates at new levels.
- Combined flux and noise can stabilize or destabilize limit cycles depending on the sign and magnitude of the flux.
- The system may reach new steady states where one population is maintained solely by external input rather than internal interactions.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The same flux-plus-noise construction could be applied to other two-species models such as competition or mutualism to test whether external inputs generically suppress or enhance coexistence.
- Real ecosystems with regulated hunting quotas or seasonal subsidies provide direct data sets against which the modified equations could be calibrated.
- The noise term invites questions about whether the fluctuations preserve or destroy the original phase-space invariants of the deterministic system.
Load-bearing premise
The chosen modifications are natural extensions whose effects on population trajectories are worth deriving.
What would settle it
Numerical integration or analytic solution showing that the modified equations produce population curves indistinguishable from the classic model for all initial conditions and parameter values.
read the original abstract
In this paper, we suggest two ways of modifications, which seem natural: a) we will introduce sponsors/hunters of predators or/and preys with "license" for constant rate of sponsoring/hunting (regular external fluxes); b) we will introduce noise of kinetic coefficients.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript proposes two modifications to the classical predator-prey (Lotka-Volterra) model that the authors describe as natural: (a) addition of constant-rate external fluxes via sponsors or hunters of predators/prey, and (b) introduction of noise in the kinetic coefficients, with the stated goal of examining their influence on the dynamics.
Significance. If the modifications had been implemented with derivations of the altered ODEs, stability analysis, or numerical comparisons to the unperturbed system, the work could have offered concrete insight into the robustness of oscillatory behavior under realistic perturbations. As written, however, no such analysis is supplied, so the manuscript contributes no verifiable result.
major comments (1)
- [Abstract] Abstract: the central claim is that the two modifications will be used to study influence on predator-prey dynamics, yet the text supplies neither the modified equations, the stochastic terms, nor any equilibrium, stability, or simulation results relative to the classical system; the title's promise of analysis is therefore unsupported.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the detailed report. The manuscript proposes two natural modifications to the Lotka-Volterra model but, as the referee correctly observes, stops short of supplying explicit equations or performing analysis. We address this below and indicate where revisions will be made.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: the central claim is that the two modifications will be used to study influence on predator-prey dynamics, yet the text supplies neither the modified equations, the stochastic terms, nor any equilibrium, stability, or simulation results relative to the classical system; the title's promise of analysis is therefore unsupported.
Authors: We agree that the present version of the manuscript does not contain the modified ODEs, the explicit stochastic terms, or any equilibrium/stability/simulation results. The text limits itself to describing the two modifications conceptually. In revision we will add the explicit forms of the augmented deterministic system (constant external fluxes) and the stochastic system (noise in kinetic coefficients), together with the corresponding equilibrium analysis and at least a brief comparison of oscillatory behavior with the classical case. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No derivation chain or predictions present; paper only proposes model modifications
full rationale
The provided abstract and description contain no equations, fitted parameters, derivations, or claims of predictions. The paper announces two 'natural' modifications (external fluxes and noise in kinetic coefficients) but performs no analysis, stability checks, or comparisons that could reduce to self-definition or fitted inputs. No self-citations, uniqueness theorems, or ansatzes are invoked in the given text. The work is therefore self-contained as a proposal with no load-bearing mathematical steps to inspect for circularity.
discussion (0)
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