Abstract

We use juvenile-adult discrete-time infectious disease models with intrinsically generated demographic population cycles to study the effects of age structure on the persistence or extinction of disease and the basic reproduction number, . Our juvenile-adult Susceptible-Infectious-Recovered (SIR) and Infectious-Salmon Anemia-Virus (ISA models share a common disease-free system that exhibits equilibrium dynamics for the Beverton-Holt recruitment function. However, when the recruitment function is the Ricker model, a juvenile-adult disease-free system exhibits a range of dynamic behaviours from stable equilibria to deterministic period k population cycles to Neimark-Sacker bifurcations and deterministic chaos. For these two models, we use an extension of the next generation matrix approach for calculating to account for populations with locally asymptotically stable period k cycles in the juvenile-adult disease-free system. When and the juvenile-adult demographic system (in the absence of the disease) has a locally asymptotically stable period k population cycle, we prove that the juvenile-adult disease goes extinct whenever . Under the same period k juvenile-adult demographic assumption but with , we prove that the juvenile-adult disease-free period k population cycle is unstable and the disease persists. When , our simulations show that the juvenile-adult disease-free period k cycle dynamics drives the juvenile-adult SIR disease dynamics, but not the juvenile-adult ISAv disease dynamics.

Details

Title
Age structured discrete-time disease models with demographic population cycles
Author
van den Driessche, P 1 ; Abdul-Aziz, Yakubu 2 

 Department of Mathematics and Statistics, University of Victoria, Victoria, Canada 
 Department of Mathematics, Howard University, Washington, DC, USA 
Pages
308-331
Publication year
2020
Publication date
Dec 2020
Publisher
Taylor & Francis Ltd.
ISSN
17513758
e-ISSN
17513766
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2470883701
Copyright
© 2020 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.