Floods, droughts turn mild diseases deadly-study*
25 Jun 2008 00:01:18 GMT
Source: Reuters
By Julie Steenhuysen
CHICAGO, June 24 (Reuters) - Extreme floods and droughts brought on by
climate change can turn normally harmless infections into significant
threats, international researchers said on Tuesday.
They said weather extremes can create conditions in which several fairly
harmless diseases converge at once, creating a "one-two punch" that can
devastate populations of wildlife or livestock.
"When you have these extreme swings it will tend to synchronize these
kinds of co-infections, which are likely to be more common with climate
change," said Craig Packer of the University of Minnesota, whose study
appears in the Public Library of Science journal PLoS ONE.
Many researchers have predicted that climate changes brought on by
heat-trapping carbon dioxide emissions could alter traditional
relationships between pathogens and their hosts, making normally benign
diseases more deadly.
Packer said his team has found a real-world example.
The researchers studied two unusually lethal outbreaks of canine
distemper virus or CDV that occurred in 1994 and 2001 in a population of
lions in Tanzania's Serengeti National Park and Ngorongoro Crater.
Most canine distemper outbreaks in the past have caused little or no
harm to lions in the region, Packer said.
"It turns out that the lethal outbreaks had immediately followed severe
droughts within the country, which had a very interesting effect on the
ecosystem," Packer said in a telephone interview.
He said the droughts weakened local populations of Cape Buffalo, which
were then infested with ticks. "Those buffalo had been weakened to the
extent that they could no longer fight off infections from the ticks,"
Packer said.
So, when the lions feasted on this rich source of meat, they became
infected with tick-borne blood parasites.
The lions, meanwhile, had been fighting off an outbreak of the canine
distemper virus, which had suppressed their immune systems. "That
one-two punch is what killed them," Packer said.
"A distemper infection is like having a short, sharp bout of AIDS,"
Packer explained.
"It's an immunosuppressive virus. If you are being challenged, it now
allows those other diseases to completely take over. That's what happened."
Packer said the study suggests extreme climate conditions can change
traditional relationships between pathogens and their hosts.
"That could be a concern not just for wild animals like lions, but also
for livestock, people, you name it," he said.
The study is available on the Internet at
http://www.plosone.org/doi/pone.0002545. (Editing by Maggie Fox and Todd
Eastham)