Pattern formation triggered by rare events: Lessons from the spread of rabies
Authored by Volker Grimm, Florian Jeltsch, C Wissel, R Brandl, MS Muller
Date Published: 1997
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Platforms:
C++
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Abstract
Understanding of large-scale spatial pattern formation is a key to
successful management in ecology and epidemiology. Neighbourhood
interactions between local units are known to contribute to large-scale
patterns, but how much do they contribute and what is the role of
regional interactions caused by long-distance processes? How much
long-distance dispersal do we need to explain the patterns that we
observe in nature? There seems to be no way to answer these questions
empirically. Therefore, we present a modelling approach that is a
combination of a grid-based model describing local interactions and an
individual-based model describing dispersal. Applying our approach to
the spread of rabies, we show that in addition to local rabies dynamics, one long-distance infection per 14 000 km(2) per year is sufficient to
reproduce the wave-like spread of this disease. We conclude that even
rare ecological events that couple local dynamics on a regional scale
may have profound impacts on large-scale patterns and, in turn, dynamics. Furthermore, the following results emerge: (i) Both
neighbourhood infection and long-distance infection are needed to
generate the wave-like dispersal pattern of rabies; (ii) randomly
walking rabid foxes are not sufficient to generate the wave pattern; and
(iii) on a scale of less than 100 km x 100 km, temporal oscillations
emerge that are independent from long-distance dispersal.
Tags
Dynamics
Dispersal
population
Model
Spatial spread
Britain
Foxes vulpes-vulpes