Suppose that lions have a geometric offspring distribution. p_k=(1-theta) theta^k, k ge 0 with mean 1.5. If the current world population of lions is 10, what is the probability they will go extinct in 1 generation? What is the probability they will go extinct eventually?

hexaedru8p

hexaedru8p

Answered question

2022-10-02

Suppose that lions have a geometric offspring distribution. p k = ( 1 θ ) θ k , k 0 with mean 1.5. If the current world population of lions is 10, what is the probability they will go extinct in 1 generation? What is the probability they will go extinct eventually?
Same two questions whose offspring distribution is Poisson with mean 0.8, and current population is 5000.

Answer & Explanation

Caiden Brewer

Caiden Brewer

Beginner2022-10-03Added 5 answers

Step 1
Suppose every member gives birth independently to an identically distributed number of "children", X is the number of offspring. If P ( X = 0 ) > 0
P ( t h e   p r o c e s s   w i l l   g o   e x t i n c t ) = 1   E X 1
Step 2
When E X > 1, and you want to compute P(the process will go extinct), then you need to use the generating function for X.

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