Skip to main content

Home/ Climate Change Impacts Inventory/ Group items tagged mosquitoes

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Hunter Cutting

Mosquitoes and moths appear in heights of Nepal - 0 views

  • Mosquitoes have traditionally been the scourge of the Tarai but have now gone cosmopolitan and even made it to the freezing cold altitude of the famous Pathibhara temple in Taplejung district.
  • "I had never seen mosquitoes during my 15-year stint at this temple. It has been a novel experience for me," the priest at the temple, Dilli Ram Acharya, said. google_protectAndRun("ads_core.google_render_ad", google_handleError, google_render_ad);
  • Acharya said white and grey moths have also appeared in the hilltop
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • The mosquitoes and moths have made life miserable for people living in the Upper Phedi just 430 meters downhill from the temple.
  • Locals claimed that mosquitoes and moths were not seen even in Bhalugaude area, a couple of hundred meters further downhill, previously. "We didnĀ“t realize they were mosquitoes at first. We had to start using nets after mosquito bites started becoming unbearable," Prem Kumar Rai of Bhalugaude revealed.
  • Local researchers attributed the prevalence of moths and mosquitoes to climate change just like the change in time of flowering of rhododendron was linked to the global phenomenon. "It may also be due to the waste materials but the main reason is climate change," concurred chief of the District Public Health Office Bishnu Rath Giri.
Hunter Cutting

Climate change helping disease spread north in Europe - 0 views

  • (Reuters)
  • The report links warmer temperatures to the spread of dengue fever, yellow fever, malaria and even human plague in Europe."Fundamental influences of climate change on infectious disease can already be discerned and it is likely that new vectors and pathogens will emerge and become established in Europe within the next few years," says the report by the European Academies Science Advisory Council (EASAC).
  • The independent group is formed of 26 national science academies from across the European Union.
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • When temperatures rise, the insects that spread disease mature faster and produce more offspring, the report says.
  • "To me, it doesn't make a difference how we call it, but that we have had a higher temperature over the last 20, 30 years, which is documented," said Dr Volker ter Meulen, EASAC chairman."These higher temperatures provide for the vectors and the viruses to grow faster and produce more," he added. "More vectors, more virus, and this will cause more disease."For example, rising temperatures in Europe would provide new habitats for a mosquito that transmits yellow fever, West Nile virus, dengue fever and encephalitis, ter Meulen said.The same mosquito has been linked to over 200 European cases of chikungunya, a virus that causes fever and destruction of the joints.
Hunter Cutting

Dengue fever cases spiking, spreading in Latin America - 0 views

  • Venezuelan Health Minister, Eugenia Sader stated that the dengue epidemic covers almost half the world and the spike in the disease is owing to climate change. Speaking on State VTV channel, the Minister confirmed a 88% increase of dengue in the Americas. In Venezuela, she admitted, the increase in dengue cases is 69% as of May but Venezuela has the lowest death rate from the disease in the region, standing at 0.7%. The population has an important role to play in eliminating the threat of dengue transmitted by the the white-legged mosquito. People, she urged, must eliminate stagnant pools of water left in tins or in old tires and start using mosquito nets.
  • Sader said the effect of climate on spreading the disease is clear in Venezuela because Andean States have started reporting cases of dengue for the first time.
Hunter Cutting

Disease incidence rising in Uruguay in tandem with climate change - 0 views

  • The incidence of cardiovascular, respiratory and water-borne diseases is rising in Uruguay in tandem with climate change, while dengue fever and malaria lurk at the country's borders. Higher temperatures are encouraging the presence of insect vectors carrying diseases that were eradicated decades ago, experts say.Increasingly frequent spells of extreme weather particularly affect the health of the poorest, who live in overcrowded conditions in precarious dwellings lacking sanitation, in the shantytowns that have sprung up at an exponential rate since the 1990s in the Montevideo metropolitan area. Many of them are on low-lying land exposed to flooding. Diarrhoea, hepatitis A and leptospirosis are some of the most common illnesses resulting from flooding and inadequate disposal of human waste, the head of the Health Ministry's Environmental and Occupational Health Division, Carmen Ciganda, told IPS. "These diseases are not exactly caused by climate change, but they are associated with it and become more prevalent when there are floods or droughts," she said. At the Pereira Rossell Hospital, the country's main children's hospital, respiratory diseases climbed from 17.7 percent in 2003 to 23.3 percent in 2007, and leptospirosis cases increased from 64 in 2006 to 106 in 2007. But Ciganda warned of threats that so far have been kept at bay beyond the country's borders. "If our climate becomes more tropical, conditions will be more favourable for the vectors that transmit diseases like dengue, yellow fever and malaria," she said. The average yearly temperature in Uruguay has risen by 0.8 degrees Celsius in the last 100 years, and spring and summer average temperatures are now higher than they were in the early 20th century, while rainfall has become heavier and more frequent in the last 50 years.
  • "Since 2007, the mosquito has been detected in the capital city. Longer summers, and the delayed onset of cold weather (in the southern hemisphere winter) until late May, mean that the mosquitoes do not go into hibernation and continue to reproduce for a longer time," the coordinator of the Departmental Emergency Committee in Montevideo, Daniel Soria, told IPS. He said frequent heavy rainfall, a result of climate variability, hampers the struggle to prevent dengue and other diseases entering the country. "When 50 or 60 millimetres of rainwater falls in less than half an hour, it overwhelms the sewer system in Montevideo, and people in the shanty towns suffer most," he said. "Flooding of the Miguelete, Pantanoso and Carrasco rivers, which flow across the city, causes a lot of erosion, so people are constantly having to be evacuated." In Uruguay, nearly 60,000 people were evacuated between 1997 and 2008, and over half a million were affected in various ways from floods following a 30 percent increase in rainfall. The trend is expected to worsen in future, according to official reports.
Hunter Cutting

Dengue Re-emerges in U.S. as climate warms - 0 views

  • For the first time in more than 65 years, dengue has returned the continental United States, according to an advisory the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued in late May.
  • The upsurge is not unexpected. Experts say more than half the world's population will be at risk by 2085 because of greater urbanization, global travel and climate change.
  • The risk is set to increase. A report in the medical journal Lancet, which looked at the impact of climate change on the global distribution of dengue fever, found that nearly 5 billion to 6 billion people will be living in land suitable for transmission by 2085.
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • This is compared to 3 billion to 5 billion people who would be at risk without climate change.
  • Viral development is faster at warmer temperatures and mosquitoes survive for longer, according to Paul Epstein, associate director of the center for health and the global environment at Harvard Medical School.
  • "As things continue to warm, there'll be more breaches of our shores by tropical illnesses," Epstein said.
1 - 5 of 5
Showing 20 items per page