Effect of diffusion and cross-diffusion in a predator-prey model with a transmissible disease in the predator species (Q1722237): Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 22:59, 19 March 2024

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Effect of diffusion and cross-diffusion in a predator-prey model with a transmissible disease in the predator species
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    Effect of diffusion and cross-diffusion in a predator-prey model with a transmissible disease in the predator species (English)
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    14 February 2019
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    Summary: We study a Lotka-Volterra type predator-prey model with a transmissible disease in the predator population. We concentrate on the effect of diffusion and cross-diffusion on the emergence of stationary patterns. We first show that both self-diffusion and cross-diffusion can not cause Turing instability from the disease-free equilibria. Then we find that the endemic equilibrium remains linearly stable for the reaction diffusion system without cross-diffusion, while it becomes linearly unstable when cross-diffusion also plays a role in the reaction-diffusion system; hence, the instability is driven solely from the effect of cross-diffusion. Furthermore, we derive some results for the existence and nonexistence of nonconstant stationary solutions when the diffusion rate of a certain species is small or large.
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    predator-prey model
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    transmissible disease in predator
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    cross-diffusion
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