## Abstract River temperature remains a subject of major worldwide research, yet understanding of multi‐scale thermal variability across river systems is limited. Such studies are necessary to elucidate the relative importance of site‐specific (reach‐scale) versus landscape controls. This article a
Host Spatial Heterogeneity and Extinction of an SIS Epidemic
✍ Scribed by Thomas Caraco; Maria Duryea; Geoffrey Gardner; William Maniatty; Boleslaw K. Szymanski
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 252 KB
- Volume
- 192
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-5193
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✦ Synopsis
Spatially explicit epidemic models explore population-level consequences of interactions between neighboring infectious and susceptible individuals. Most such models equate local and global host density, so that each individual interacts with the same number of neighbors. But many natural populations exhibit heterogeneity in local abundance. Therefore, we let host dispersion vary from uniform to clumped in a spatial epidemic with recovery. We analytically approximated the epidemic with a branching process to show how the probability of pathogen extinction could depend on the degree of host clumping. We then simulated the detailed model across a range of parameter combinations. Both approaches to the problem indicate that host spatial aggregation strongly increases the chance of pathogen extinction.
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