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4.1- Homogeneous Mixing

As was the case for the one-species model, placement of the two-species model just described on a fully-connected graph effectively eliminates topology from the problem. Deterministic analysis (valid for sufficiently large systems) leads to the following coupled pair of nonlinear differential equations:

 

eqnarray131

Model 2 can be solved numerically to yield a(t) and b(t), the fractional populations of A and B, respectively.

Analysis of the solution shows that the epidemic threshold for A is unaffected by B's birth and death rates; it remains at tex2html_wrap_inline827 . B has no intrinsic epidemic threshold; it can survive as long as there are As upon which to feed, regardless of the relative values of B's birth and death rates.

Figure 4a illustrates the population dynamics of A and B for a particular set of birth and death rates chosen such that A is above the epidemic threshold: tex2html_wrap_inline489 , tex2html_wrap_inline491 , tex2html_wrap_inline493 , and tex2html_wrap_inline495 . Thus tex2html_wrap_inline849 , but the life cycle of B is ten times that of A. When the initial populations are very small, they increase exponentially at first. At intermediate times, there may be some damped predator-prey oscillations -- the existence, frequency, and decay rate of which depend upon the birth and death rates. Eventually, the populations settle to stable values determined by the birth and death rates. The presence of B can strongly suppress the equilibrium population of A. For the set of parameters illustrated in Fig. 4a, the equilibrium fractional population of A would increase by a factor of roughly 16 if B were removed, as can be seen by comparing the curve for A with that in Figure 1.


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