Title of article :
Effects of predation on host–pathogen dynamics in SIR models
Author/Authors :
Manojit Roy، نويسنده , , Robert D. Holt، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages :
13
From page :
319
To page :
331
Abstract :
The integration of infectious disease epidemiology with community ecology is an active area of research. Recent studies using SI models without acquired immunity have demonstrated that predation can suppress infectious disease levels. The authors recently showed that incorporating immunity (SIR models) can produce a “hump”-shaped relationship between disease prevalence and predation pressure; thus, low to moderate levels of predation can boost prevalence in hosts with acquired immunity. Here we examine the robustness of this pattern to realistic extensions of a basic SIR model, including density-dependent host regulation, predator saturation, interference, frequency-dependent transmission, predator numerical responses, and explicit resource dynamics. A non-monotonic relationship between disease prevalence and predation pressure holds across all these scenarios. With saturation, there can also be complex responses of mean host abundance to increasing predation, as well as bifurcations leading to unstable cycles (epidemics) and pathogen extinction at larger predator numbers. Firm predictions about the relationship between prevalence and predation thus require one to consider the complex interplay of acquired immunity, host regulation, and foraging behavior of the predator
Keywords :
Regulation , Predator–prey , Pathogen extinction , Pathogen , immunity , Unstable cycles
Journal title :
Theoretical Population Biology
Serial Year :
2008
Journal title :
Theoretical Population Biology
Record number :
774065
Link To Document :
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