Individual and patch behaviour in structured metapopulation models
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Abstract: Density dependent Markov population processes with countably many types can often be well approximated over finite time intervals by the solution of the differential equations that describe their average drift, provided that the total population size is large. They also exhibit diffusive stochastic fluctuations on a smaller scale about this deterministic path. Here, it is shown that the individuals in such processes experience an almost deterministic environment. Small groups of individuals behave almost independently of one another, evolving as Markov jump processes, whose transition rates are prescribed functions of time. In the context of metapopulation models, we show that `individuals' can represent either patches or the individuals that migrate among the patches; in host--parasite systems, they can represent both hosts and parasites.
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Cites work
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Cited in
(14)- Dominating occupancy processes by the independent site approximation
- How patch configuration affects the impact of disturbances on metapopulation persistence
- Stochastic modelling of age-structured population with time and size dependence of immigration rate
- Individual versus cluster recoveries within a spatially structured population
- Reactivity, Attenuation, and Transients in Metapopulations
- Dynamical behaviors of a two-competitive metapopulation system with impulsive control
- Central limit approximations for Markov population processes with countably many types
- Limits for density dependent time inhomogeneous Markov processes
- Deterministic approximation of a stochastic metapopulation model
- Fast approximate simulation of finite long-range spin systems
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- A law of large numbers approximation for Markov population processes with countably many types
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