Role of migratory bird population in a simple eco-epidemiological model
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Publication:3432693
DOI10.1080/13873950500303352zbMath1130.93305OpenAlexW2047645910MaRDI QIDQ3432693
Samrat Chatterjee, Joydev Chattopadhyay
Publication date: 18 April 2007
Published in: Mathematical and Computer Modelling of Dynamical Systems (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10.1080/13873950500303352
Epidemiology (92D30) Population dynamics (general) (92D25) Control/observation systems governed by ordinary differential equations (93C15)
Related Items (11)
On a new eco-epidemiological model for migratory birds with modified Leslie-Gower functional schemes ⋮ A handling tool to estimate upper bounds of environmental fluctuations ⋮ A strategy for a disease-free system -- an eco-epidemiological model based study ⋮ Analysis of a nonautonomous model for migratory birds with saturation incidence rate ⋮ Ecoepidemiology: a More Comprehensive View of Population Interactions ⋮ ROLE OF MIGRATORY BIRDS UNDER ENVIRONMENTAL FLUCTUATION — A MATHEMATICAL STUDY ⋮ On the dynamics of a nonautonomous predator-prey model with Hassell-Varley type functional response ⋮ A new non-autonomous model for migratory birds with Leslie-Gower Holling-type II schemes and saturation recovery rate ⋮ ROLE OF DISEASE PROPAGATION IN MIGRATORY BIRD POPULATION ⋮ Time delay factor can be used as a key factor for preventing the outbreak of a disease-results drawn from a mathematical study of a one season eco-epidemiological model ⋮ Alternative prey source coupled with prey recovery enhance stability between migratory prey and their predator in the presence of disease
Cites Work
- Predator-prey populations with parasitic infection
- Modeling the role of viral disease in recurrent phytoplankton blooms
- The effects of diseases on competing species
- Periodicity in an epidemic model with a generalized non-linear incidence
- A predator-prey model with disease in the prey
- Elements of Mathematical Ecology
- Global stability of an SEIS epidemic model with recruitment and a varying total population size
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