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Potential climate change effects on the distribution of urban and sylvatic dengue and yellow fever vectors. | LitMetric

Potential climate change effects on the distribution of urban and sylvatic dengue and yellow fever vectors.

Pathog Glob Health

Grupo de Biogeografía, Diversidad y Conservación, Departamento de Biología Animal, Universidad de Málaga, Facultad de Ciencias, Malaga, Spain.

Published: July 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Climate change might make it easier for mosquitoes that spread dengue and yellow fever to thrive in more places.
  • Researchers studied how different areas could change for these mosquitoes because of climate changes happening now and in the future.
  • They found that certain regions in Africa and Asia might see more mosquitoes, and it’s important to pay attention to these areas to keep track of these mosquito populations.

Article Abstract

Climate change may increase the risk of dengue and yellow fever transmission by urban and sylvatic mosquito vectors. Previous research primarily focused on and . However, dengue and yellow fever have a complex transmission cycle involving sylvatic vectors. Our aim was to analyze how the distribution of areas favorable to both urban and sylvatic vectors could be modified as a consequence of climate change. We projected, to future scenarios, baseline distribution models already published for these vectors based on the favorability function, and mapped the areas where mosquitoes' favorability could increase, decrease or remain stable in the near (2041-2060) and distant (2061-2080) future. Favorable areas for the presence of dengue and yellow fever vectors show little differences in the future compared to the baseline models, with changes being perceptible only at regional scales. The model projections predict dengue vectors expanding in West and Central Africa and in South-East Asia, reaching Borneo. Yellow fever vectors could spread in West and Central Africa and in the Amazon. In some locations of Europe, the models suggest a reestablishment of , while will continue to find new favorable areas. The results underline the need to focus more on vectors , and in West and Central sub-Saharan Africa, especially Cameroon, Central Africa Republic, and northern Democratic Republic of Congo; and underscore the importance of enhancing entomological monitoring in areas where populations of often overlooked vectors may thrive as a result of climate changes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11338215PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/20477724.2024.2369377DOI Listing

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