In this paper, stochastic analysis of a diseased prey–predator system involving adaptive back-stepping control is studied. The system was investigated for its dynamical behaviours, such as boundedness and local stability analysis. The global stability of the system was derived using the Lyapunov function. The uniform persistence condition for the system is obtained. The proposed system was studied with adaptive back-stepping control, and it is proved that the system stabilizes to its steady state in nonlinear feedback control. The value of the system is described mostly by the environmental stochasticity in the form of Gaussian white noise. We also established some conditions for oscillations of all positive solutions of the delayed system. Numerical simulations are illustrated, and sustained our analytical findings. We concluded that controlled harvesting on the susceptible and infected prey is able to control prey infection.
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