• New malaria transmission patterns emerge

    From ScienceDaily@1337:3/111 to All on Fri Aug 28 21:30:36 2020
    New malaria transmission patterns emerge in Africa

    Date:
    August 28, 2020
    Source:
    University of Leeds
    Summary:
    An international study reveals how future climate change could
    affect malaria transmission in Africa over the next century.



    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    An international study reveals how future climate change could affect
    malaria transmission in Africa over the next century.


    ========================================================================== Malaria is a climate sensitive disease; it thrives where it is warm
    and wet enough to provide surface water suitable for breeding by the
    mosquitoes that transmit it.

    For more than two decades now, scientists have suggested that climate
    change may alter the distribution and length of transmission seasons
    due to new patterns of temperature and rainfall.

    The burden of this disease falls primarily on Africa. In 2018, out of
    an estimated 228 million cases of malaria worldwide, 93% were in the
    African continent.

    Detailed mapping of malaria transmission is vital for the distribution
    of public health resources and targeted control measures.

    In the past, rainfall and temperature observations have been used in
    malaria climatic suitability models to estimate the distribution and
    duration of annual transmission, including future projections.



    ==========================================================================
    But factors affecting how rainfall results in water for mosquito
    breeding are highly complex, for example how it is absorbed into soil
    and vegetation, as well as rates of runoff and evaporation.

    A new study, led by the Universities of Leeds and Lincoln in the UK,
    for the first time combined a malaria climatic suitability model with
    a continental- scale hydrological model that represents real-world
    processes of evaporation, infiltration and flow through rivers.

    This process-focused approach gives a more in-depth picture of
    malaria-friendly conditions across Africa.

    When run using future climate scenarios up to the end of this century,
    a different pattern of future changes in malaria suitability emerges
    compared to previous estimates.

    While the findings show only very minor future changes in the total area suitable for malaria transmission, the geographical location of many of
    those areas shifts substantially.



    ==========================================================================
    When a hydrological model is used, aridity-driven decreases in suitability
    are no longer observed across southern Africa, particularly Botswana
    and Mozambique.

    Conversely, projected decreases in malaria suitable areas across West
    Africa are more pronounced. The largest difference is in South Sudan,
    where the study estimates substantial decreases in malaria suitability
    in the future.

    The study, published today in Nature Communications, highlights river
    corridors as year-round hot spots of malaria transmission.

    While flowing water in large rivers is not a suitable habitat for malaria- carrying mosquitoes, nearby smaller water bodies, such as bankside
    ponds and floodplains can make for ideal larvae breeding grounds, as do associated irrigation schemes.

    The Niger and Senegal rivers in Mali and Senegal, and the Webi Juba and
    Webi Shabeelie rivers in Somalia, are all identified in the study as
    suitable for malaria transmission despite currently extending beyond
    the geographical ranges hitherto predicted to be climatically suitable.

    This is especially important since human populations tend to concentrate
    close to rivers.

    Study lead author Dr Mark Smith, from the School of Geography at Leeds,
    said: "Since the huge efforts to eradicate malaria from parts of the
    world, the areas where we observe malaria today are only a part of the
    total area that would otherwise be suitable for malaria transmission.

    "But if we are to project the impact of climate change on the geography
    of malaria transmission, we need to develop more sophisticated ways
    of representing that envelope of malaria suitability both today and in
    the future.

    "Our approach aims to lay out the environmental risks of malaria more
    clearly, so that projections of climate change impacts can help inform
    public health interventions and support vulnerable communities.

    "But this is only a first step, there is a lot more we can do to embed
    state- of-the-art hydrological and flood models into estimates of malaria environmental suitability and, potentially, even early warning systems
    of local malaria epidemics." Co-author, Professor Chris Thomas from
    Lincoln Centre for Water and Planetary Health, at the University of
    Lincoln added: "The shrinking map of malaria in Africa over that last 20
    years is primarily due to huge public health efforts underway to tackle
    this disease, not climate change.

    "But malaria elimination is made much more difficult where the climate
    is highly suitable for transmission, so it is key to know where these
    areas are now and are projected to be in the future.

    "In this study we show that linking physical geographic processes to the biology helps us get to grips with some of that complexity. The exciting challenge now is to develop this approach at local scales."

    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by University_of_Leeds. Note: Content
    may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. M. W. Smith, T. Willis, L. Alfieri, W. H. M. James, M. A. Trigg, D.

    Yamazaki, A. J. Hardy, B. Bisselink, A. De Roo, M. G. Macklin, C. J.

    Thomas. Incorporating hydrology into climate suitability models
    changes projections of malaria transmission in Africa. Nature
    Communications, 2020; 11 (1) DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-18239-5 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/08/200828081030.htm

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