Abstract:
In this paper, we analyze a system of delay differential equations incorporating prey’s refuge, fear, fear-response delay, extra food for predators and their gestation lag. First, we examined the system without delay. The persistence, stability (local and global) and various bifurcations are discussed. We provide detailed analysis for transcritical and Hopf-bifurcation. The existence of positive equilibria and the stability of prey-free equilibrium are interrelated. It is shown that (i) fear can stabilize or destabilize the system, (ii) prey refuge in a specific limit can be advantageous for both species, (iii) at a lower energy level (gained from extra food), the system undergoes a supercritical Hopf-bifurcation and (iv) when the predator gains high energy from extra food, it can survive through a homoclinic bifurcation, and prey may become extinct. The possible occurrence of bi-stability with or without delay is discussed. We observed switching of stability thrice via subcritical Hopf-bifurcation for fear-response delay. On changing some parametric values, the system undergoes a supercritical Hopf-bifurcation for both delay parameters. The delayed system undergoes the Hopf-bifurcation, so we can say that both delay parameters play a vital role in regulating the system’s dynamics. The analytical results obtained are verified with the numerical simulation.