News and Research
Immune System
In African Highlands, Climate Extremes Are Critical Factor
In Malaria Epidemics

A
UB study has shown that for residents living uphill from
these highland valleys in Africa, climate change can be
a sensitive predictor of malaria epidemics. (University
At Buffalo)
2-19-2004
Seasonal fluctuations in a region's climate, rather than
consistently high annual temperatures or levels of rainfall,
play an important role in causing malaria epidemics in the
African highlands, a new research paper by University at
Buffalo biologists reports.
The
paper, published online this week in Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences, is the first to demonstrate
a strong correlation between climate variability and the
increase in malaria epidemics that have struck the African
highlands since the late 1980s.
"Our
data show that climate variability plays a major role in
initiating malaria epidemics in the East African highlands,"
said Guiyun Yan, Ph.D., associate professor of biological
sciences in the UB College of Arts and Sciences and senior
author on the paper.
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Under normal climatic conditions, Yan explained, malaria
is rare in the highlands because of the region's cool weather. The
mysterious re-emergence of epidemic malaria since the late 1980s in
the East African highlands after a six-decade hiatus has baffled researchers.
Because individuals in these highlands lack the immunity
that people have in regions where malaria transmission occurs year-round,
their mortality rate is far higher.
In the PNAS paper, the researchers describe a statistical
model they developed on the relationship between climate variability
and the number of malaria outpatients between the 1970s and 1990s
in seven areas in the highlands of Kenya, Ethiopia and Uganda.
They found that while average annual temperatures
in these regions had not changed, there was significantly increased
variability within the year in temperature and rainfall and that the
number of cases of malaria strongly increased during the years with
high climatic variability.
According to the paper, the model explained 65-81
percent of the variation from the mean in the number of malaria outpatients
at the seven sites during the years included in the study.
"We found that since 1989, there have been significantly
more highs and lows in temperature and rainfall in these regions,"
said Yan.
At the same time, they found that there were strong
synergistic effects between temperature and rainfall on malaria cases.
"The use of either temperature or rainfall alone
is not sensitive enough to detect anomalies in the climate that would
signal a malaria epidemic," said Yan.
The UB research provides insight into the debate over
whether or not changes in the climate -- specifically, global warming
-- have contributed to the alarming increase in frequent malaria epidemics
in this region, where previously the disease was rare.
Unlike recent papers that have defined global warming
in the form of average annual temperatures, the UB research focuses
on increases in temperature and rainfall during the months when malaria
transmission is most likely to occur.
"For a malaria epidemic to happen, you don't
need warming all year round," said Yan. "You do need some
warming and increased rainfall in some months in order for mosquitoes
to breed."
According to Yan, average annual temperature data
will not reveal climate change that is more pronounced in specific
months.
"Malaria epidemics usually occur in June and
July," he explained. "If you look at the whole year, you
won't see the climate signal."
The research was funded by a National Institutes of
Health grant to Yan, the first grant to focus on determining how climate
and man-made environmental changes might affect the transmission of
malaria in African highlands, which have undergone rapid human settlement
in recent years.
The UB research will prove critical to the ultimate
goal of that research: predicting and eventually preventing outbreaks
of malaria using novel, cost-effective control strategies.
Co-authors on the paper are Guofa Zhou, Ph.D., and
Noboru Minakawa, Ph.D., both senior research scientists in the UB
Department of Biological Sciences, and Andrew K. Githeko, Ph.D., a
senior scientist at the Centre for Vector Biology and Control Research,
Kenya Medical Research Institute, where Yan conducts the collaborative
research.
The University at Buffalo is a premier research-intensive
public university, the largest and most comprehensive campus in the
State University of New York. UB's more than 27,000 students pursue
their academic interests through more than 300 undergraduate, graduate
and professional degree programs.
This
article has been adapted from a news release issued by University
At Buffalo, www.buffalo.edu.
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