Chicago - 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.