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Epidemic in a structured host population : dynamic hydra effect

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dc.date.accessioned 2017-06-09T09:58:04Z und
dc.date.accessioned 2017-10-24T12:22:18Z
dc.date.available 2017-06-09T09:58:04Z und
dc.date.available 2017-10-24T12:22:18Z
dc.date.issued 2017-06-09T09:58:04Z
dc.identifier.uri http://radr.hulib.helsinki.fi/handle/10138.1/6071 und
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10138.1/6071
dc.title Epidemic in a structured host population : dynamic hydra effect en
ethesis.discipline Applied Mathematics en
ethesis.discipline Soveltava matematiikka fi
ethesis.discipline Tillämpad matematik sv
ethesis.discipline.URI http://data.hulib.helsinki.fi/id/2646f59d-c072-44e7-b1c1-4e4b8b798323
ethesis.department.URI http://data.hulib.helsinki.fi/id/61364eb4-647a-40e2-8539-11c5c0af8dc2
ethesis.department Institutionen för matematik och statistik sv
ethesis.department Department of Mathematics and Statistics en
ethesis.department Matematiikan ja tilastotieteen laitos fi
ethesis.faculty Matematisk-naturvetenskapliga fakulteten sv
ethesis.faculty Matemaattis-luonnontieteellinen tiedekunta fi
ethesis.faculty Faculty of Science en
ethesis.faculty.URI http://data.hulib.helsinki.fi/id/8d59209f-6614-4edd-9744-1ebdaf1d13ca
ethesis.university.URI http://data.hulib.helsinki.fi/id/50ae46d8-7ba9-4821-877c-c994c78b0d97
ethesis.university Helsingfors universitet sv
ethesis.university University of Helsinki en
ethesis.university Helsingin yliopisto fi
dct.creator Hawryluk, Iwona Ewa
dct.issued 2017
dct.language.ISO639-2 eng
dct.abstract The aim of this project is to investigate the hydra effect occurring in a population infected by a disease. First, I will explain what exactly the hydra effect is. Intuitively, higher mortality rate applied to a population will decrease the size of that population, but this is not always the case. Under some circumstances the population size might increase with higher mortality, causing the phenomenon called by Abrams and Matsuda (2005) the 'hydra effect', after the mythological beast, who grew two heads in place of one removed. Abrams (2009) lists in a few mechanisms underlying the hydra effect from which the one I will focus onis a temporal separation of mortality and density dependence. Most work on the hydra effect involved explicit increase of a death rate, for example by harvesting. The idea of this thesis is to investigate the existence of the hydra effect due to mortality increased not explicitly, but through a lethal disease. Such an approach has not been shown in any published work so far. Instead of harvesting, we will have a virulence, the disease-induced mortality. In this project, I fi rst briefly explain some theory underlying my model. In chapter 2 I look at disease-free population and bifurcation analysis when varying the birth rate. In chapter 3 I propose the model and continue with population dynamics analysis. I look at bifurcations of equilibria when varying birth rate, virulence and transmission rate. Then in section 3.4 I investigate whether it is possible to observe the hydra effect if there exists a trade-off between virulence and transmission rate, and derive a condition for transcritical and fold bifurcation to occur. In chapter 4 I focus on evolution of traits. First I study evolution of the pathogen, assuming the same trade-off as earlier. Finally I look at evolution of host's traits, immunity and birth rate, using Adaptive Dynamics framework (Geritz et al. 1998). I compare two possible trade-off functions and show that with a concave trade-off, the host will evolve to getting rid of the disease despite increasing its immunity. en
dct.language en
ethesis.language.URI http://data.hulib.helsinki.fi/id/languages/eng
ethesis.language English en
ethesis.language englanti fi
ethesis.language engelska sv
ethesis.thesistype pro gradu-avhandlingar sv
ethesis.thesistype pro gradu -tutkielmat fi
ethesis.thesistype master's thesis en
ethesis.thesistype.URI http://data.hulib.helsinki.fi/id/thesistypes/mastersthesis
dct.identifier.urn URN:NBN:fi-fe2017112251838
dc.type.dcmitype Text

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