Dating and localizing an invasion from post-introduction data and a coupled reaction-diffusion-absorption model
Invasion of new territories by alien organisms is of primary concern for environmental and health agencies and has been a core topic in mathematical modeling, in particular in the intents of reconstructing the past dynamics of the alien organisms and predicting their future spatial extents. Partial...
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Zusammenfassung: | Invasion of new territories by alien organisms is of primary concern for
environmental and health agencies and has been a core topic in mathematical
modeling, in particular in the intents of reconstructing the past dynamics of
the alien organisms and predicting their future spatial extents. Partial
differential equations offer a rich and flexible modeling framework that has
been applied to a large number of invasions. In this article, we are
specifically interested in dating and localizing the introduction that led to
an invasion using mathematical modeling, post-introduction data and an adequate
statistical inference procedure. We adopt a mechanistic-statistical approach
grounded on a coupled reaction-diffusion-absorption model representing the
dynamics of an organism in an heterogeneous domain with respect to growth.
Initial conditions (including the date and site of the introduction) and model
parameters related to diffusion, reproduction and mortality are jointly
estimated in the Bayesian framework by using an adaptive importance sampling
algorithm. This framework is applied to the invasion of \textit{Xylella
fastidiosa}, a phytopathogenic bacterium detected in South Corsica in 2015,
France. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.1808.00868 |