The impact of global warming on the metabolism of mosquitoes
could further complicate predictions of how climate change will affect
malaria, according to scientists.
Scientists have for the first time estimated how warmer climate
will affect the metabolism of cold-blooded animals, such as mosquitoes,
on a global scale. Such animals depend on outside temperature to
regulate their body's metabolism.
The study, published today (7 October) in Nature, says
that the effect of temperature on metabolism is non-linear, affecting
animals in warm regions disproportionately more than those in cold
regions.
"At high temperatures, very small [temperature] changes have
huge effects," said lead researcher Michael Dillon, an assistant
professor of zoology and physiology at the University of Wyoming, United
States.
Although the temperature has so far risen less rapidly in the
tropical regions, the researchers say these areas will actually see the
most drastic changes in metabolic rates of cold blooded animals.
The changes are also strongest in smaller animals, meaning that mosquitoes are among those most likely to be affected.
"Over the last 30 years we've seen significant changes in
metabolic rate," said Dillon. "If we continue on the track that's
predicted, it's only going to get worse."
But it is still unclear what effects this might have on diseases spread by mosquitoes, such as malaria.
He said the effects of warmer weather on malaria might be
threefold: higher metabolic rates shorten gestation periods boosting the
numbers of mosquitoes as successive generations hatch more frequently;
longer periods of warmth would allow the mosquitoes to be active for
longer; and the metabolic rate of malaria parasites might increase as
well leading to higher parasite numbers carried by the mosquitoes.
Combined, these three temperature effects could increase the
potential for malaria infection in tropical regions. But whether this
will actually occur is an "incredibly complicated" question, said
Dillon.
Other factors might mean such an increase in metabolic rate
could have little effect on malaria. For example, availability of other
resources could limit mosquito population growth, or they simply might
not sustain the higher metabolic rates. "They may just burn themselves
out," he said.
Tarekegn Abeku, senior technical specialist for disease
prevention at the Malaria Consortium, said that while short-term
temperature changes in regions such as the East African highlands have
increased malaria transmission rates, we do not know how gradual warming
will influence the disease. "The long-term effects in general are not
very clear," he added.
Paul Parham, a research fellow at the Grantham Institute for
Climate Change, United Kingdom, said that when these new findings are
put into existing disease transmission models, "small changes in the
metabolic rates will have potentially quite large effects on disease
transmission". Source:SciDev.Net
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