Source |
Ebola cases in Africa. (Source) |
Before Emile, there had never been a case of Ebola in West Africa. The previous outbreak to infect over 100 people was in 2007, when 249 people became infected in Congo. Just before the outbreak, a migration of fruit bats encroached on the Congolese villages and prompted local hunters to slaughter the bats in their thousands, leaving the villages "literally inundated with blood-bathed bat corpses". Considering 3.1 million hectares of Congo's rainforests were lost during the 1990s alone, it's hardly surprising that fruit bats viewed the villages that encroached on their habitat as new sources of food and shelter - inevitably resulting in more bites and more risk of disease.
The fruit bat (source) |
On top of this, incidence of yellow fever, malaria, dengue fever, Lyme disease and Rocky Mountain spotted fever have all been linked to the loss of host species natural habitat. In sub-Saharan Africa, colonial expansion and deforestation in the early 20th Century allowed one particular lentivirus to jump between Cameroonian chimps and humans. The virus's new host - humans - were abundant and widespread, allowing it to evolve into HIV/AIDS, one of the most severe pandemics of modern times that has killed around 36 million people in a matter of decades.
The Role of Climate Change
Africa's meningitis belt (Source) |
It is possible - likely, even - that the current Ebola outbreak can, in part, be attributed to climate change. Simple bat-to-human contact alone probably isn't enough for Ebola to take hold in a population, but instead is facilitated by a "cascade of events", a bringing together of animals and humans in part because of "unique climatic conditions", according to World Health Organization expert Pierre Formenty. Ebola seems to follow heavy rains that alleviate intense drought. When rains finally come to a drought-torn land, the trees and bushes can finally produce their fruits. Disease-ridden animals and humans naturally flock to the much needed food, resulting in increased likelihood of disease spreading.
A recent report on food security in Sierra Leone, the epicentre of the current outbreak, found that climate change is resulting in "seasonal droughts, strong winds, thunderstorms, landslides, heat waves, floods, and changed rainfall patterns", all-in-all a recipe for the conditions needed for diseases like Ebola to spread and prosper.
The Future
The spread of an infectious disease can never be fully explained by a single factor; its origin and prevalence is inherently complex and unique for each case. Nevertheless, as climate change and land use change becomes an ever more serious issue, so too will infectious disease. Unfortunately, therefore, more disease is just another threat we must face in a warmer world.
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