The potential impact of climate change on infectious diseases of Arctic fauna

Climate change is already affecting Arctic species including infectious disease agents and greater changes are expected. Some infectious diseases are already increasing but future changes are difficult to predict because of the complexity of host – agent – environment relationships. However mechanis...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Michael J. Bradley, Susan J. Kutz, Emily Jenkins, Todd M. O’hara
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: EcoHealth
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.628.8694
http://www.iwcoffice.co.uk/_documents/sci_com/SC59docs/sc-59-forinformation39.pdf
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Summary:Climate change is already affecting Arctic species including infectious disease agents and greater changes are expected. Some infectious diseases are already increasing but future changes are difficult to predict because of the complexity of host – agent – environment relationships. However mechanisms related to climate change that will influence disease patterns are understood. Warmer temperatures will benefit free living bacteria and parasites whose survival and devel-opment is limited by temperature. Warmer temperatures could promote survivability, shorter development rates and transmission. Insects such as mosquitoes and ticks that transmit disease agents may also benefit from climate change as well as the diseases they spread. Climate change will have significant impacts on biodiversity. Disease agents of species that benefit from warming will likely become more prevalent. Host species stressed by changing envi-ronmental conditions may be more vulnerable to disease agents. Warming could lead to increased agriculture and other economic opportunities in the Arctic bringing people, domestic food animals, pets and invasive species and their disease agents into Northern regions. Climate warming may also favor the release of persistent environmental pollut-ants some of which can affect the immune system and may favor increased rates of some diseases. (Int J Circumpolar Health 2005;64(5):468-477.)