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Representing spatial interactions in simple ecological models

The real world is a spatial world, and all living organisms live in a spatial environment. For mathematical biologists striving to understand the dynamical behaviour and evolution of interacting populations, this obvious fact has not been an easy one to accommodate. Space was considered a disposable complication to systems for which basic questions remained unanswered and early studies ignored it. But as understanding of non-spatial systems developed attention turned to methods of incorporating the effects of spatial structure. The essential problem is how to usefully manage the vast amounts of information that are implicit in a fully heterogeneous spatial environment. Various solutions have been proposed but there is no single best approach which covers all circumstances. High dimensional systems range from partial differential equations which model continuous population densities in space to the more recent individual-based systems which are simulated with the aid of computers. This thesis develops a relatively new type of model with which to explore the middle ground between spatially naive models and these fully complex systems. The key observation is to note the existence of correlations in real systems which may naturally arise as a consequence of their dynamical interaction amongst neighbouring individuals in a local spatial environment. Reflecting this fact - but ignoring other large scale spatial structure - the new models are developed as differential equations (pair models) which are based on these correlations. Effort is directed at a first-principles derivation from explicit assumptions with well stated approximations so the origin of the models is properly understood. The first step is consideration of simple direct neighbour correlations. This is then extended to cover larger local correlations and the implications of local spatial geometry. Some success is achieved in establishing the necessary framework and notation for future development. However, complexity quickly multiplies and on occasion conjectures necessarily replace rigorous derivations. Nevertheless, useful models result. Examples are taken from a range of simple and abstract ecological models, based on game theory, predator-prey systems and epidemiology. The motivation is always the illustration of possibilities rather than in depth investigation. Throughout the thesis, a dual interpretation of the models un-folds. Sometimes it can be helpful to view them as approximations to more complex spatial models. On the other hand, they stand as alternative descriptions of space in their own right. This second interpretation is found to be valuable and emphasis is placed upon it in the examples. For the game theory and predator-prey examples, the behaviour of the new models is not radically different from their non-spatial equivalents. Nevertheless, quantitative behavioural consequences of the spatial structure are discerned. Results of interest are obtained in the case of infection systems, where more realistic behaviour an improvement on non-spatial models is observed. Cautiously optimistic conclusions are reached that this, middle road of spatial modelling has an important contribution to make to the field.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:297995
Date January 1997
CreatorsMorris, Andrew John
PublisherUniversity of Warwick
Source SetsEthos UK
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeElectronic Thesis or Dissertation
Sourcehttp://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/1127/

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