Crush E [TESTED]

[ \frac{dN}{dt} = rN\left(1 - \frac{N}{K}\right) - \frac{aN}{1 + ahN}P - mN ]

For high ( P ), the equilibrium collapses abruptly. The critical ( P_{crit} ) is the “crush threshold.” For constant stress ( S > S_{crit} ): crush e

[ \frac{dN}{dt} < -r_{max} N ]

The 2021 Pacific Northwest heatwave caused an estimated 1 billion intertidal animals (mussels, clams, starfish) to die in situ — a classic crush event measured in hours. 4. Case Studies 4.1 Coral Reefs: Thermal Crush Repeated marine heatwaves (e.g., 2016 Great Barrier Reef) caused coral cover to drop from ~30% to <10% in some regions. Bleaching crushes the coral–zooxanthellae mutualism; if heat stress persists beyond ~3 weeks, mortality is inevitable. Recovery would require decades, but re-warming intervals are now shorter than recovery times — a sustained crush. 4.2 Forest Dieback: Drought + Beetle Crush Western North American pine forests experienced a synergy: drought-weakened trees cannot produce resin to repel bark beetles; beetle mass attacks crush entire stands over 1–2 years. Biomass loss >90% in some areas. 4.3 Hypoxic “Dead Zones” Nutrient runoff creates oxygen-depleted bottom waters. Mobile organisms flee, sessile organisms (clams, worms) die en masse — a crush of benthic communities. The Gulf of Mexico dead zone (summer ~15,000 km²) crushes fisheries productivity. 5. Theoretical Models of Crush Dynamics 5.1 The Bistability & Fold Bifurcation Model Crush events often correspond to crossing a fold bifurcation in a system with alternative stable states. Let ( N ) = prey biomass, ( P ) = predator or stressor intensity: Case Studies 4

Zebra mussels ( Dreissena polymorpha ) in North American lakes filter phytoplankton so efficiently that pelagic food webs collapse — a crush of primary productivity and zooplankton. 3.3 Abiotic Crush Extreme temperatures, oxygen depletion, or toxins directly kill organisms faster than reproduction or migration can compensate. Mobile organisms flee

[ T_{crush} = \frac{\ln(N_0 / N_{threshold})}{S - r_{max}} ]