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Pairwise Invasibility Plots (PIP) illustrating the effect of increasing the contact rate in the resting state on the evolutionary dynamics of virulence

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Version 3 2019-12-19, 12:21
Version 2 2019-12-19, 11:46
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posted on 2019-12-19, 12:21 authored by abdou FOFANAabdou FOFANA, Amy HurfordAmy Hurford
In the paper, Parasite-induced shifts in host movement may explain the transient coexistence of high- and low-pathogenic disease strains, we investigate the effect of increasing the contact rate in the resting state on the evolutionary dynamics of virulence. We vary the rate of contact in the resting state from 0 to 0.25. The x-axis and y-axis are the resident and the mutant parasite replication rates respectively. Virulence depends on parasite replication rate within the host. For a combination resident-mutant parasite replication rates, white colour indicates that the mutant goes extinct and white colour indicates that the mutant replaces the resident parasite at the endemic equilibrium. The intersections are evolutionary equilibria, and intersections where the colour is white at the top bottom are evolutionarily stable trait values, whereas intersections where the colour is black at the top and bottom are invisible repellor. See paper for details

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RGPIN 2014-05413

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