Parasites of Madagascar's lemurs expanding with climate change
Meredith Barrett |
Rising
temperatures and shifting rainfall patterns in Madagascar could fuel the spread
of lemur parasites and the diseases they carry. By combining data on six
parasite species from ongoing surveys of lemur health with weather data and
other environmental information for Madagascar as a whole, a team of Duke
University researchers has created probability maps of likely parasite
distributions throughout the island today.
Then,
using climate projections for the year 2080, they estimate what parasite
distributions might look like in the future.
"We
can use these models to figure out where the risk of lemur-human disease
transmission might be highest, and use that to better protect the future of
lemur and human health," said lead author Meredith Barrett, who conducted
the study while working as a graduate student at Duke.
Lemurs
are native to the African island of Madagascar, where climate change isn't the
only threat to their survival. More than 90 percent of the lemurs' forest
habitat has already been cleared for logging, farming and grazing. Illegal
hunting for bushmeat is also a problem.
A key
part of saving these animals is ensuring that they stay healthy as
environmental conditions in their island home continue to shift, Barrett said.
Average
annual temperatures in Madagascar are predicted to rise by 1.1 to 2.6 degrees
Celsius by 2080. Rainfall, drought and cyclone patterns are changing too.
In a study published in the January 2013 issue of the journal Biological Conservation, Barrett and colleagues
examined what these changes could mean for lemur health by taking a cue from
the parasites they carry.
The
team focused on six species of mites, ticks and intestinal worms commonly known
to infect lemurs. The parasites are identified in lemur fur and feces. Some
species -- such as pinworms, whipworms and tapeworms -- cause diarrhea,
dehydration and weight loss in human hosts. Others, particularly mites and
ticks, can transmit diseases such as plague, typhus or scabies.
When
the researchers compared their present-day maps with parasite distributions
predicted for the future, they found that lemur parasites could expand their
range by as much as 60 percent. Whipworms, for example, which are now largely
confined to Madagascar's northeast and western coasts, may become widely
distributed on the country's southeastern coast as well.
Anne
Yoder, senior author on the study and Director of the Duke Lemur Center, said
the research is particularly important now as lemurs have been identified by
the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) as the most
endangered mammals on earth.
Warmer
weather means that parasites could grow and reproduce more quickly, or spread
to higher latitudes and elevations where once they were unable to survive. As
lemur parasites become more prevalent, the diseases they carry could show up in
new places. The spread could be harmful to lemur populations that have never encountered
these pests before, and lack resistance to the diseases they carry.
Shifting
parasite distributions could have ripple effects on people too. As human
population growth in Madagascar drives people and their livestock into
previously uninhabited areas, wildlife-human disease transmission becomes
increasingly likely.
The
authors hope their results will help researchers predict where disease hotspots
are likely to occur, and prepare for them before they hit.
Meredith
Barrett is now a postdoctoral scholar with the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
Health & Society Scholars Program at the University of California at San
Francisco and Berkeley. Jason Brown of Duke University and Randall Junge of the
Columbus Zoo & Aquarium were also authors of this study.
Source: Duke
University
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