ENWC314 Chapter 8: ENWC314 chapter 8 book notes

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Pathogens include microorganisms, such as some bacteria and fungi, as well as viruses and prions (protein bodies), which are non-living. Parasitism has much in common with infection as a negative biotic interaction, but it differs from infection mainly because parasites are often large, multicellular organisms, such as tapeworms large parasites are called macroparasites. Microparasites have short generation times and thus very high reproduction rates. Hosts that recover from infections typically acquire some immunity against reinfection, sometimes for life. For microparasitic infections, we can divide the host population into 3 groups of individuals: susceptible, infected and recovered. Compartment models are useful got answering questions about the stability of the host-microparasite interaction: epidemics. An epidemic spreads through a population until the number of susceptible individuals falls below a threshold of transmission. At the threshold, the susceptible population becomes so small that it is unlikely an infected individual will contact a susceptible individual.

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