Search
Skip to Search Results- 5COVID-19
- 3Inverse method
- 2Atlantic salmon
- 2Generalized boosting model
- 2Hypothesis-free
- 2Machine Learning
- 17Biological Sciences, Department of
- 16Biological Sciences, Department of/Journal Articles (Biological Sciences)
- 8Mathematical and Statistical Sciences, Department of
- 8Mathematical and Statistical Sciences, Department of/Research Publications (Mathematical and Statistical Sciences)
- 1Biological Sciences, Department of/Research Data and Materials (Biological Sciences)
-
Migratory host vectors can maintain the high-dose refuge effect in a structured host-parasite system: the case of sea lice and salmon Evolutionary Applications
Download2020-04-15
Andrew W. Bateman, Stephanie J. Peacock, Martin Krkošek, Mark A. Lewis
Migration can reduce parasite burdens in migratory hosts, but it connects populations and can drive disease dynamics in domestic species. Farmed salmon are infested by sea louse parasites, often carried by migratory wild salmonids, resulting in a costly problem for industry and risk to wild...
-
Modeling the early transmission of COVID-19 in New York and San Francisco using a pairwise network model
Download2022-01-01
Shanshan Feng, Xiao-Feng Luo, Xin Pei, Zhen Jin, Mark Lewis, Hao Wang
Classical epidemiological models assume mass action. However, this assumption is violated when interactions are not random. With the recent COVID-19 pandemic, and resulting shelter in place social distancing directives, mass action models must be modified to account for limited social...
-
Second-generation stoichiometric mathematical model to predict methane emissions from oil sands tailings
Download2019-07-31
Jude D. Kong, Hao Wang, Tariq Siddique, Julia Foght, Kathleen Semple, Zvonko Burkus, Mark A. Lewis
Microbial metabolism of fugitive hydrocarbons produces greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from oil sands tailings ponds (OSTP) and end pit lakes (EPL) that retain fluid tailings from surface mining of oil sands ores. Predicting GHG production, particularly methane (CH4), would help oil sands...
-
Supporting data - Territoriality and home-range dynamics in meerkats, Suricata suricatta: a mechanistic modelling approach
Supporting data - Territoriality and home-range dynamics in meerkats, Suricata suricatta: a mechanistic modelling approach
Download2015-01-01
Andrew W. Bateman, Mark A. Lewis, Gabriella Gall, Marta B. Manser, Tim H. Clutton-Brock
These were data used to fit home-range models for meerkat social groups. Data are provided as comma-separated variables, within directories in a zip file.
-
Temperature- and Turbidity-Dependent Competitive Interactions Between Invasive Freshwater Mussels
Download2016-01-01
Qihua Huang, Hao Wang, Anthony Ricciardi, Mark A. Lewis
We develop a staged-structured population model that describes the competitive 7 dynamics of two functionally similar, congeneric invasive species: zebra mussels and quagga 8 mussels. The model assumes that the population survival rates are functions of temperature 9 and turbidity, and that the...
-
Territoriality and home-range dynamics in meerkats, Suricata suricatta: a mechanistic modelling approach
Download2015-01-01
Andrew W. Bateman, Mark A. Lewis, Gabriella Gall, Marta B. Manser, Tim H. Clutton-Brock
Multiple approaches exist to model patterns of space use across species, among them resource selection analysis, statistical home-range modelling and mechanistic movement modelling. Mechanistic home-range models combine the benefits of these approaches, describing emergent territorial patterns...
-
2016-01-01
Stephanie J. Peacock, Andrew W. Bateman, Martin Krkosek, Mark A. Lewis
The dynamics of coupled populations have mostly been studied in the context of metapopulation viability with application to, for example, species at risk. However, when considering pests and pathogens, eradication, not persistence, is often the end goal. Humans may intervene to control nuisance...