Guerra C A, Snow R W, Hay S I
TALA Research Group, Tinbergen Building, Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3PS, UK.
Ann Trop Med Parasitol. 2006 Apr;100(3):189-204. doi: 10.1179/136485906X91512.
Global environmental change is expected to affect profoundly the transmission of the parasites that cause human malaria. Amongst the anthropogenic drivers of change, deforestation is arguably the most conspicuous, and its rate is projected to increase in the coming decades. The canonical epidemiological understanding is that deforestation increases malaria risk in Africa and the Americas and diminishes it in South-east Asia. Partial support for this position is provided here, through a systematic review of the published literature on deforestation, malaria and the relevant vector bionomics. By using recently updated boundaries for the spatial limits of malaria and remotely-sensed estimates of tree cover, it has been possible to determine the population at risk of malaria in closed forest, at least for those malaria-endemic countries that lie within the main blocks of tropical forest. Closed forests within areas of malaria risk cover approximately 1.5 million km2 in the Amazon region, 1.4 million km2 in Central Africa, 1.2 million km2 in the Western Pacific, and 0.7 million km2 in South-east Asia. The corresponding human populations at risk of malaria within these forests total 11.7 million, 18.7 million, 35.1 million and 70.1 million, respectively. By coupling these numbers with the country-specific rates of deforestation, it has been possible to rank malaria-endemic countries according to their potential for change in the population at risk of malaria, as the result of deforestation. The on-going research aimed at evaluating these relationships more quantitatively, through the Malaria Atlas Project (MAP), is highlighted.
全球环境变化预计将深刻影响导致人类疟疾的寄生虫传播。在人为驱动因素中,森林砍伐可谓最为显著,预计其速度在未来几十年还会加快。传统的流行病学观点认为,森林砍伐会增加非洲和美洲的疟疾风险,而在东南亚则会降低疟疾风险。本文通过对已发表的关于森林砍伐、疟疾及相关病媒生物学的文献进行系统综述,为这一观点提供了部分支持。利用最近更新的疟疾空间界限和树木覆盖的遥感估计数据,得以确定封闭森林中面临疟疾风险的人口数量,至少对于那些位于热带森林主要区域内的疟疾流行国家而言是如此。疟疾风险区域内的封闭森林在亚马逊地区约为150万平方公里,在中非为140万平方公里,在西太平洋为120万平方公里,在东南亚为70万平方公里。这些森林中面临疟疾风险的相应人口总数分别为1170万、1870万、3510万和7010万。通过将这些数字与各国具体的森林砍伐率相结合,得以根据森林砍伐导致面临疟疾风险人口变化的可能性,对疟疾流行国家进行排名。文中还强调了正在进行的旨在通过疟疾地图项目(MAP)更定量地评估这些关系的研究。