Ecological effects of climate change include human epidemics
DENVER, Colo.The link between climate and
cholera, a serious health problem in many parts of the world, has
become stronger in recent decades, according to a University of
Michigan scientist who takes an ecological approach to understanding
disease patterns.
Mercedes Pascual, an assistant professor of ecology
and evolutionary biology, discussed her work during a symposium
Feb. 17 on the ecology of infectious diseases at the annual meeting
of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
In work published over the past three years, Pascual
and coworkers at the University of Barcelona and the International
Center for Diarrhoeal Disease Research in Bangladesh found evidence
that El Nino-Southern Oscillation (ENSO), a major source of climate
variability from year to year, influences cycles of cholera. They
looked initially at climate and disease data from Bangladesh for
the past two decades; more recently they compared those results
with data from Bangladesh for the periods 1893-1920 and 1920-1940
to see whether the coupling between climate variability and cholera
cycles has become stronger in recent decades. Their examination
of the data, which relied on a suite of techniques called time series
analysis, suggests that it has.
"We had known that ENSO plays a role in
the variability of cholera, but our work revealed that the role
of ENSO has intensified," says Pascual, who was named one
of "The 50 Most Important Women in Science" by Discover
magazine in November 2002. What's more, the link is strongest
during ENSO events, with cholera increasing after warm events and
decreasing after cold events. In the years between events, the climate-cholera
link breaks down.
With predictions that ENSO will become stronger
and more variable in coming years under a global warming scenario,
understanding how its connection to human disease changes will be
increasingly important, says Pascual. Often, it's difficult
to tell whether disease cycles are driven by environmental factors
or by processes intrinsic to disease transmission. Pascual and coworkers
recently developed a method that makes it possible to distinguish
between the two possibilities.
Pascual says her work is just one example of how
principles and tools of ecology and evolutionary biology can aid
understanding of disease patterns. For example, using techniques
developed to study the movement of species or populations, researchers
are studying the spread of diseases such as rabies. In addition,
interactions among diseases can be analyzed similarly to interactions
among species. And even such classic ecological subjects as competition
have applications to disease, Pascual said. "When you have
diseases that share hosts, it's similar to having species
that compete for a resource. One big question is how do they coexist?"
Another sign of growing interest in the ecology
and evolutionary biology of disease is the trend for universities
to offer courses on the subject, said Pascual, who is co-teaching
a new undergraduate course, Evolutionary Biology and Human Disease,
at the University of Michigan this semester.
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Contact: Nancy Ross-Flanigan
Phone: (734) 647-1853
E-mail: rossflan@umich.edu