Multi-Strain Host-Vector Dengue Modeling: Dynamics and Control
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this paper for a detailed discussion. The Hopf bifurcations occur also for the host-vector
model Figure 6.2b but there is no torus bifurcation TR.
6.4.2
Results for seasonally-forced systems
In [1, 41] dealing with dengue fever modelling, we considered a seasonally changing
mosquito population due to climate factors such as temperature or rainfall. For the host-
vector model the number of mosquitos M is modeled as a seasonally-forced term and is
given explicitly by a cosine function. For the host-only model in [1] the infection rate β(t)
was changed periodically:
M(t) = M0(1+ηcosω(t+ϕ)) ,
β(t) = β0(1+ηcosω(t+ϕ)) .
(6.9)
Parameter M0 is the mean vector population size in the host-vector model and β0 the mean
value for the host-only model. In the host-vector case the number of mosquitos changes
over time but because we assume a changing area size, the mosquito density remains the
same. The results for the seasonally forced host-only model (parameter β(t) with η = 0.35),
and the host-vector model (parameter M(t) with η = 0.1) are compared in Fig. 6.3 in the
lower range of the ratio of likelihoods of transmission from hosts with secondary and hosts
with primary infection to vectors, φ ∈[0,1.2].
In conclusion, these results indicate that the dynamics predicted by both models is
qualitatively but not quantitatively the same.
a
b
φ
I
T
P +
T R
P −
H
1.2
1
0.8
0.6
0.4
0.2
0
3
2.4
1.8
1.2
0.6
0
φ
I
P
P
T R
1.2
1
0.8
0.6
0.4
0.2
0
3
2.4
1.8
1.2
0.6
0
Figure 6.3: Two-strain non-autonomous a host-only model (6.6) and b host-vector
model (6.7) with parameter α = 2. The bullets mark the global maximum and minimum
values for limit cycles for total infected I. Red indicates stable and blue unstable solutions.