Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4499010 Journal of Theoretical Biology 2007 16 Pages PDF
Abstract

The interaction between multiple parasite strains within different host types may influence the evolutionary trajectories of parasites. In this article, we formulate a deterministic model with two strains of parasites and two host types in order to investigate how heterogeneities in parasite virulence and host life-history may affect the persistence and spread of diseases in natural systems. We compute the reproductive number of strain ii (RiRi) independently, as well as the (conditional) “invasion” reproductive number for strains ii (Rij, j≠ij≠i) when strain jj is at a positive equilibrium. We show that the disease-free equilibrium is locally asymptotically stable if Ri<1Ri<1 for both strains and is unstable if Ri>1Ri>1 for one stain. We establish the criterion Rij>1 for strain ii to invade strain jj. Subthreshold coexistence driven by coinfection is possible even when RiRi of one strain is below 1. We identify conditions that determine the evolution of parasite specialism or generalism based on the life-history strategies employed by hosts, and investigate how host strains may influence parasite persistence.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences (General)
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