Fatal or harmless: extreme bistability induced by sterilizing, sexually transmitted pathogens
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Publication:376410
DOI10.1007/s11538-012-9802-5zbMath1310.92051OpenAlexW2125573660WikidataQ51280108 ScholiaQ51280108MaRDI QIDQ376410
Publication date: 5 November 2013
Published in: Bulletin of Mathematical Biology (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11538-012-9802-5
Related Items (9)
Why have parasites promoting mating success been observed so rarely? ⋮ Host-pathogen dynamics under sterilizing pathogens and fecundity-longevity trade-off in hosts ⋮ Sexually transmitted infections and mate-finding Allee effects ⋮ Diseased social predators ⋮ Impacts of infection avoidance for populations affected by sexually transmitted infections ⋮ Reduced fertility and asymptotics of the logistic model ⋮ Is more better? Higher sterilization of infected hosts need not result in reduced pest population size ⋮ Impacts of Infections and Predation on Dynamics of Sexually Reproducing Populations ⋮ Evolutionary suicide through a non-catastrophic bifurcation: adaptive dynamics of pathogens with frequency-dependent transmission
Cites Work
- Models for pair formation in bisexual populations
- Population models for diseases with no recovery
- Patterns in the effects of infectious diseases on population growth
- Disease transmission models with density-dependent demographics
- The logistic equation revisited: The two-sex case
- Analysis of a disease transmission model in a population with varying size
- Gender-Structured Population Modeling
- Population collapse to extinction: the catastrophic combination of parasitism and Allee effect
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