The Kolmogorov model addresses a limitation of the
Volterra equations by imposing self-limiting growth in prey populations, preventing unrealistic exponential growth scenarios. It also provides a predictive model for the qualitative behavior of predator-prey systems without requiring explicit functional forms for the interaction terms. The model's contributions to theoretical ecology were not immediately recognized, with significant appreciation only emerging in the 1960s through the work of American
ecologists
Michael Rosenzweig and
Robert H. MacArthur. Their research demonstrated how the model can be used to understand non-transitory
oscillations in ecological systems and the conditions for
local stability of predator-prey interactions. Recent research has shown that Kolmogorov systems can exhibit complex behaviors, including the existence of
strange attractors and robust permanent subsystems, implying that even deterministic predator-prey interactions can lead to unpredictable long-term dynamics. == See also ==