In this paper, we discuss the competition of two species for a single essential growth-limiting nutriment with viral infection that affects only the first species. Although the classical models without viral infection suggest competitive exclusion, this model exhibits the stable coexistence of both species. We reduce the fourth-dimension proposed model to a three-dimension one. Thus, the coexistence of the two competing species is demonstrated using the theory of uniform persistence applied to the three-variable reduced system. We prove that there is no coexistence of both species without the presence of the virus and the satisfaction of some assumptions on the growth rates of species. Finally, we give some numerical simulations to confirm ...
RNA viruses exist as genetically diverse populations displaying a range of virulence degrees. The ev...
We consider an SI model of three competing species that are all affected by a single pathogen which ...
We consider competition between antibiotic producing bacteria, non-producers (or cheaters), and sens...
In this paper, we discuss the competition of two species for a single essential growth-limiting nutr...
Abstract. Recent research indicates that viruses are much more prevalent in aquatic environ-ments th...
The competition between two microbial species in a chemostat definitely leads to the disappearance o...
RNA viruses exist in large intra-host populations which display great genotypic and phenotypic diver...
In the present paper, we consider a mathematical model of two microbial species competing for two co...
In this paper we consider models of two competing species that are both affected by a pathogen which...
An SIS epidemic model in two competing species with the mass action incidence is formulated and anal...
For microbial species competing for one limiting resource in a chemostat, mathematical models lead t...
This paper is devoted to the study of persistence and evolution of two viruses taking into account v...
This work is devoted to the study of persistence and evolution of two viruses in the host organism t...
It is known that a homogeneous environment having invariant inputs cannot allow for steady state coe...
We study a model of the chemostat with several species in competition on a single resource. We take ...
RNA viruses exist as genetically diverse populations displaying a range of virulence degrees. The ev...
We consider an SI model of three competing species that are all affected by a single pathogen which ...
We consider competition between antibiotic producing bacteria, non-producers (or cheaters), and sens...
In this paper, we discuss the competition of two species for a single essential growth-limiting nutr...
Abstract. Recent research indicates that viruses are much more prevalent in aquatic environ-ments th...
The competition between two microbial species in a chemostat definitely leads to the disappearance o...
RNA viruses exist in large intra-host populations which display great genotypic and phenotypic diver...
In the present paper, we consider a mathematical model of two microbial species competing for two co...
In this paper we consider models of two competing species that are both affected by a pathogen which...
An SIS epidemic model in two competing species with the mass action incidence is formulated and anal...
For microbial species competing for one limiting resource in a chemostat, mathematical models lead t...
This paper is devoted to the study of persistence and evolution of two viruses taking into account v...
This work is devoted to the study of persistence and evolution of two viruses in the host organism t...
It is known that a homogeneous environment having invariant inputs cannot allow for steady state coe...
We study a model of the chemostat with several species in competition on a single resource. We take ...
RNA viruses exist as genetically diverse populations displaying a range of virulence degrees. The ev...
We consider an SI model of three competing species that are all affected by a single pathogen which ...
We consider competition between antibiotic producing bacteria, non-producers (or cheaters), and sens...