Zürcher Nachrichten - Climate change creating new virus hotspots 'in our backyard'

EUR -
AED 4.193161
AFN 73.073718
ALL 94.138849
AMD 419.575587
ANG 2.044236
AOA 1047.582358
ARS 1691.189375
AUD 1.660896
AWG 2.055194
AZN 1.941446
BAM 1.954754
BBD 2.295772
BDT 140.484861
BGN 1.930604
BHD 0.429774
BIF 3391.115941
BMD 1.141774
BND 1.474424
BOB 7.893778
BRL 5.92444
BSD 1.13989
BTN 107.706393
BWP 15.490715
BYN 3.305732
BYR 22378.776576
BZD 2.292474
CAD 1.623232
CDF 2597.536421
CHF 0.922428
CLF 0.026755
CLP 1053.012399
CNY 7.757158
CNH 7.765464
COP 3933.412515
CRC 517.027993
CUC 1.141774
CUP 30.257019
CVE 110.206056
CZK 24.247233
DJF 202.981434
DKK 7.474454
DOP 67.784339
DZD 151.962952
EGP 56.174356
ERN 17.126615
ETB 181.485248
FJD 2.566994
FKP 0.865302
GBP 0.861623
GEL 3.014363
GGP 0.865302
GHS 12.892105
GIP 0.865302
GMD 83.913975
GNF 9992.74284
GTQ 8.696349
GYD 238.432473
HKD 8.952139
HNL 30.50857
HRK 7.532053
HTG 148.981621
HUF 353.999702
IDR 20464.021049
ILS 3.411108
IMP 0.865302
INR 108.229757
IQD 1496.29524
IRR 1571081.457826
ISK 144.000278
JEP 0.865302
JMD 179.484002
JOD 0.80956
JPY 184.911459
KES 147.83728
KGS 99.848573
KHR 4578.515147
KMF 493.246501
KPW 1027.597283
KRW 1766.102258
KWD 0.353459
KYD 0.949892
KZT 553.443987
LAK 25565.32623
LBP 102073.805207
LKR 383.275003
LRD 207.449045
LSL 18.748189
LTL 3.371363
LVL 0.690648
LYD 7.323083
MAD 10.715585
MDL 20.147224
MGA 4850.405731
MKD 61.625518
MMK 2397.32604
MNT 4087.469212
MOP 9.208075
MRU 45.842385
MUR 53.936843
MVR 17.651743
MWK 1983.261748
MXN 19.956582
MYR 4.63572
MZN 72.902063
NAD 18.747865
NGN 1575.819726
NIO 41.947931
NOK 11.346799
NPR 172.329828
NZD 2.022031
OMR 0.439001
PAB 1.13989
PEN 3.89683
PGK 5.004367
PHP 69.791523
PKR 316.96457
PLN 4.288561
PYG 6941.28741
QAR 4.162336
RON 5.241909
RSD 117.367569
RUB 87.917037
RWF 1673.305023
SAR 4.287701
SBD 9.208456
SCR 15.322575
SDG 685.631614
SEK 11.095449
SGD 1.476434
SHP 0.85245
SLE 28.316491
SLL 23942.440684
SOS 652.525787
SRD 42.810257
STD 23632.423089
STN 24.487117
SVC 9.973666
SYP 126.20271
SZL 18.842173
THB 38.00339
TJS 10.566448
TMT 4.007628
TND 3.363953
TOP 2.749119
TRY 53.263204
TTD 7.748855
TWD 36.400795
TZS 2997.161032
UAH 51.156838
UGX 4177.765497
USD 1.141774
UYU 45.86587
UZS 13737.652333
VES 710.461668
VND 30017.246744
VUV 136.075843
WST 3.175141
XAF 655.606345
XAG 0.01962
XAU 0.000285
XCD 3.085702
XCG 2.054301
XDR 0.815364
XOF 655.606345
XPF 119.331742
YER 272.425469
ZAR 18.776992
ZMK 10277.333557
ZMW 20.636962
ZWL 367.650864
  • RBGPF

    0.2000

    61.5

    +0.33%

  • CMSC

    0.1300

    22.06

    +0.59%

  • RYCEF

    0.0000

    18.75

    0%

  • BCC

    -1.7600

    79.26

    -2.22%

  • RELX

    -0.0500

    31.29

    -0.16%

  • RIO

    0.5500

    94.29

    +0.58%

  • BCE

    -0.6600

    22.26

    -2.96%

  • NGG

    0.7500

    83.76

    +0.9%

  • VOD

    -0.2000

    13.69

    -1.46%

  • GSK

    0.3100

    52.81

    +0.59%

  • CMSD

    0.1300

    21.9

    +0.59%

  • BTI

    -0.0200

    62.74

    -0.03%

  • JRI

    0.0700

    12.86

    +0.54%

  • AZN

    2.5400

    190.95

    +1.33%

  • BP

    0.2200

    37.35

    +0.59%

Climate change creating new virus hotspots 'in our backyard'
Climate change creating new virus hotspots 'in our backyard' / Photo: Ye Aung THU - AFP/File

Climate change creating new virus hotspots 'in our backyard'

Climate change will drive animals towards cooler areas where their first encounters with other species will vastly increase the risk of new viruses infecting humans, raising the threat of another pandemic, researchers warned Thursday.

Text size:

There are currently at least 10,000 viruses that have the capacity to cross over into humans "circulating silently" among wild mammals, mostly in the depths of tropical forests, according to a study published in the Nature journal.

But as rising temperatures force those mammals to abandon their native habitats, they will meet other species for the first time, creating at least 15,000 new instances of viruses jumping between animals by 2070, the study forecasted.

This process has likely already begun, will continue even if the world acts quickly to reduce carbon emissions and poses a major threat to both animals and humans, the researchers said.

"We have demonstrated a novel and potentially devastating mechanism for disease emergence that could threaten the health of animal populations in the future, which will most likely have ramifications for our health too," said study co-author Gregory Albery, a disease ecologist at Georgetown University.

"This work provides us with more incontrovertible evidence that the coming decades will not only be hotter, but sicker," Albery said.

The study, five years in the making, looked at 3,139 species of mammals, modelling how their movements would change under a range of global warming scenarios, then analysing how viral transmission would be affected.

They found that new contacts between different mammals would effectively double, with first encounters occurring everywhere in the world, but particularly concentrated in tropical Africa and Southeast Asia.

- The threat of bats -

Global warming will also cause those first contacts to take place in more highly populated areas, where people "are likely to be vulnerable, and some viruses will be able to spread globally from any of these population centres".

Likely hotspots include the Sahel, the Ethiopian highlands and the Rift Valley, India, eastern China, Indonesia, the Philippines and some European population centres, the study found.

The research was completed just weeks before the start of the coronavirus pandemic, but emphasised the unique threat posed by bats, in which Covid is believed to have first emerged.

As the only mammal that can fly, bats can travel far greater distances than their land-bound brethren, spreading disease as they go.

Bats are believed to already be on the move, and the study found they accounted for a large majority of potential first encounters with other mammals, mostly in Southeast Asia.

Even if the world does massively and quickly reduce its greenhouse gas emissions -- a scenario that still seems some way off -- it might not help for this problem.

The modelling showed that the mildest climate change scenarios could lead to more cross-species transmission than the worst-case scenarios, because slower warming gives the animals more time to travel.

- 'Not preventable' -

The researchers also tried to work out when the first encounters between species could start happening, expecting it would be later this century.

But "surprisingly" their projections found that most first contacts would be between 2011-2040, steadily increasing from there.

"This is happening. It is not preventable even in the best-case climate change scenarios, and we need to put measures in place to build health infrastructure to protect animal and human populations," Albery said.

The researchers emphasised that while they had focused on mammals, other animals could harbour zoonotic viruses -- the name for viruses that jump from animals to humans.

They called for further research on the threat posed by birds, amphibians and even marine mammals, as melting sea ice allows them to mingle more.

The study's co-author Colin Carlson, a global change biologist also at Georgetown, said climate change is "creating innumerable hotspots of future zoonotic risk -- or present day zoonotic risk -- right in our backyard."

"We have to acknowledge that climate change is going to be the biggest upstream driver of disease emergence, and we have to build health systems that are ready for that."

W.Vogt--NZN