A preliminary threshold model of parasitism in the Cockle\emph{Cerastoderma edule} using delayed exchange of stability
E. A. O'Grady, S. C. Culloty, T. C. Kelly, M. J. A. O'Callaghan, D., Rachinskii

TL;DR
This paper develops a mathematical model of a host-parasite-hyperparasite system in cockles, revealing thresholds that influence parasite dynamics and suggesting hyperparasitism may support cockle populations and ecosystem stability.
Contribution
It introduces a novel threshold model incorporating delayed exchange of stability in a multi-species host-parasite system, with analytical and ecological implications.
Findings
Threshold effects influence parasite persistence.
Hyperparasite presence supports cockle abundance.
Removing hyperparasite reduces cockle numbers.
Abstract
Thresholds occur in the dynamics of many biological communities. Here we model a persistence type threshold which has been shown experimentally to exist in hyperparasitised flukes in the cockle, a shellfish. Our model consists of a periodically driven slow-fast host-parasite system of equations for a slow flukes population and a fast Unikaryon hyperparasite population. The model exhibits two branches of the critical curve crossing in a transcritical bifurcation scenario. We discuss two thresholds due to immediate and delayed exchange of stability effects; and we derive algebraic relationships for parameters of the periodic solution in the limit of the infinite ratio of the time scales. Flukes parasitise cockles and in turn are hyperparasitised by the microsporidian Unikaryon legeri; the life cycle of flukes includes several life stages and a number of different hosts. That is, the…
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