The Borneo Post

Hotter, drier, sicker? How a changing planet drives the spreading of disease

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Humans have made our planet warmer, more polluted and ever less hospitable to many species, and these changes are driving the spread of infectious disease.

Warmer, wetter climates can expand the range of vector species like mosquitos, while habitat loss can push diseasecar­rying animals into closer contact with humans.

New research reveals how complex the effects are, with our impact on the climate and planet turbocharg­ing some diseases and changing transmissi­on patterns for others.

Biodiversi­ty loss appears to play an outsize role in increasing infectious disease, according to work published in the journal Nature this week.

It analysed nearly 3,000 datasets from existing studies to see how biodiversi­ty loss, climate change, chemical pollution, habitat loss or change, and species introducti­on affect infectious disease in humans, animals and plants.

It found biodiversi­ty loss was by far the biggest driver, followed by climate change and the introducti­on of novel species.

Parasites target species that are more abundant and offer more potential hosts, explained senior author Jason Rohr, a professor of biological sciences at the University of Notre Dame.

And species with large population­s are more likely to “be investing in growth, reproducti­on and dispersal, at the expense of defences against parasites”, he told AFP.

But rarer species with more resistance are vulnerable to biodiversi­ty loss, leaving us with “more abundant, parasiteco­mpetent hosts”.

The warmer weather produced by climate change offers new habitats for disease vectors, as well as longer reproducti­ve seasons.

“If there are more generation­s of parasites or vectors, then there can be more disease,” Rohr said.

Shifting transmissi­on

Not all human adaptation of the planet increases infectious disease, however.

Habitat loss or change was associated with a drop in infectious disease, largely because of the sanitary improvemen­ts that come with urbanisati­on, like running water and sewage systems.

Climate change’s effects on disease are also not uniform across the globe.

In tropical climates, warmer, wetter weather is driving an explosion in dengue fever.

But drier conditions in Africa may shrink the areas where malaria is transmitte­d in coming decades.

Research published in the journal Science this week modelled the interactio­n between climate change, rainfall and hydrologic­al processes like evaporatio­n and how quickly water sinks into the ground.

It predicts a larger decline in areas suitable for disease transmissi­on than forecasts based on rainfall alone, with the decline starting from 2025.

It also finds the malaria season in parts of Africa could be four months shorter than previously estimated.

The findings are not necessaril­y all good news, cautioned lead author Mark Smith, an associate professor of water research at the University of Leeds.

“The location of areas suitable for malaria will shift,” he told AFP, with Ethiopia’s highlands among the regions likely to be newly affected.

People in those regions may be more vulnerable because they have not been exposed.

And population­s are forecast to grow rapidly in areas where malaria will remain or become transmissi­ble, so the overall incidence of the disease could increase.

Predicting and preparing

Smith warned that conditions too harsh for malaria may also be too harsh for us.

“The change in water availabili­ty for drinking or agricultur­e could be very serious indeed.”

The links between climate and infectious disease mean climate modelling can help predict outbreaks.

Local temperatur­e and rainfall forecasts are already used to predict dengue upticks, but they offer a short lead-time and can be unreliable.

One alternativ­e might be the Indian Ocean basin-wide index (IOBW), which measures the regional average of sea-surface temperatur­e anomalies in the Indian Ocean.

Research also published in Science this week looked at dengue data from 46 countries over three decades and found a close correlatio­n between the IOBW’s fluctuatio­ns and outbreaks in the northern and southern hemisphere­s.

The study was retrospect­ive, so the IOBW’s predictive power has not yet been tested.

But monitoring it could help officials better prepare for outbreaks of a disease that is a major public health concern.

Ultimately, however, addressing increasing infectious disease means addressing climate change, said Rohr.

Research suggests “that disease increases in response to climate change will be consistent and widespread, further stressing the need for reductions in greenhouse gas emissions”, he said.

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