Basic Properties and Qualitative Dynamics of a Vector-Borne Disease Model with Vector Stages and Vertical Transmission

This work systematically discusses basic properties and qualitative dynamics of vector-borne disease models, particularly those with vertical transmission in the vector population. Examples of disease include Dengue and Rift Valley fever which are endemic in Sub-Saharan Africa, and understanding of...

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Main Author: Sansao A. Pedro
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2018-01-01
Series:Journal of Applied Mathematics
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2018/2618985
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author Sansao A. Pedro
author_facet Sansao A. Pedro
author_sort Sansao A. Pedro
collection DOAJ
description This work systematically discusses basic properties and qualitative dynamics of vector-borne disease models, particularly those with vertical transmission in the vector population. Examples of disease include Dengue and Rift Valley fever which are endemic in Sub-Saharan Africa, and understanding of the dynamics underlying their transmission is central for providing critical informative indicators useful for guiding control strategies. Of particular interest is the applicability and derivation of relevant population and epidemic thresholds and their relationships with vertical infection. This study demonstrates how the failure of R0 derived using the next-generation method compounds itself when varying vertical transmission efficiency, and it shows that the host type reproductive number gives the correct R0. Further, novel relationships between the host type reproductive number, vertical infection, and ratio of female mosquitoes to host are established and discussed. Analytical results of the model with vector stages show that the quantities Q0, Q0v, and R0c, which represent the vector colonization threshold, the average number of female mosquitoes produced by a single infected mosquito, and effective reproductive number, respectively, provide threshold conditions that determine the establishment of the vector population and invasion of the disease. Numerical simulations are also conducted to confirm and extend the analytical results. The findings imply that while vertical infection increases the size of an epidemic, it reduces its duration, and control efforts aimed at reducing the critical thresholds Q0, Q0v, and R0c to below unity are viable control strategies.
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spelling doaj-art-a63b1c7fa3484987adacd3861c470fcf2025-08-20T03:38:44ZengWileyJournal of Applied Mathematics1110-757X1687-00422018-01-01201810.1155/2018/26189852618985Basic Properties and Qualitative Dynamics of a Vector-Borne Disease Model with Vector Stages and Vertical TransmissionSansao A. Pedro0Departamento de Matemática e Informática, Universidade Eduardo Mondlane, 257, Maputo, MozambiqueThis work systematically discusses basic properties and qualitative dynamics of vector-borne disease models, particularly those with vertical transmission in the vector population. Examples of disease include Dengue and Rift Valley fever which are endemic in Sub-Saharan Africa, and understanding of the dynamics underlying their transmission is central for providing critical informative indicators useful for guiding control strategies. Of particular interest is the applicability and derivation of relevant population and epidemic thresholds and their relationships with vertical infection. This study demonstrates how the failure of R0 derived using the next-generation method compounds itself when varying vertical transmission efficiency, and it shows that the host type reproductive number gives the correct R0. Further, novel relationships between the host type reproductive number, vertical infection, and ratio of female mosquitoes to host are established and discussed. Analytical results of the model with vector stages show that the quantities Q0, Q0v, and R0c, which represent the vector colonization threshold, the average number of female mosquitoes produced by a single infected mosquito, and effective reproductive number, respectively, provide threshold conditions that determine the establishment of the vector population and invasion of the disease. Numerical simulations are also conducted to confirm and extend the analytical results. The findings imply that while vertical infection increases the size of an epidemic, it reduces its duration, and control efforts aimed at reducing the critical thresholds Q0, Q0v, and R0c to below unity are viable control strategies.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2018/2618985
spellingShingle Sansao A. Pedro
Basic Properties and Qualitative Dynamics of a Vector-Borne Disease Model with Vector Stages and Vertical Transmission
Journal of Applied Mathematics
title Basic Properties and Qualitative Dynamics of a Vector-Borne Disease Model with Vector Stages and Vertical Transmission
title_full Basic Properties and Qualitative Dynamics of a Vector-Borne Disease Model with Vector Stages and Vertical Transmission
title_fullStr Basic Properties and Qualitative Dynamics of a Vector-Borne Disease Model with Vector Stages and Vertical Transmission
title_full_unstemmed Basic Properties and Qualitative Dynamics of a Vector-Borne Disease Model with Vector Stages and Vertical Transmission
title_short Basic Properties and Qualitative Dynamics of a Vector-Borne Disease Model with Vector Stages and Vertical Transmission
title_sort basic properties and qualitative dynamics of a vector borne disease model with vector stages and vertical transmission
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2018/2618985
work_keys_str_mv AT sansaoapedro basicpropertiesandqualitativedynamicsofavectorbornediseasemodelwithvectorstagesandverticaltransmission