Couper Lisa I, Nalukwago Desire Uwera, Lyberger Kelsey P, Farner Johannah E, Mordecai Erin A
Department of Biology, Stanford University, Stanford, California, USA.
Division of Environmental Health Sciences, University of California, Berkeley, California, USA.
Glob Chang Biol. 2024 Dec;30(12):e17610. doi: 10.1111/gcb.17610.
Climate warming is expected to substantially impact the global landscape of mosquito-borne disease, but these impacts will vary across disease systems and regions. Understanding which diseases, and where within their distributions, these impacts are most likely to occur is critical for preparing public health interventions. While research has centered on potential warming-driven expansions in vector transmission, less is known about the potential for vectors to experience warming-driven stress or even local extirpations. In conservation biology, species risk from climate warming is often quantified through vulnerability indices such as thermal safety margins-the difference between an organism's upper thermal limit and its habitat temperature. Here, we estimated thermal safety margins for 8 mosquito species that are the vectors of malaria, dengue, chikungunya, Zika, West Nile and other major arboviruses, across their known ranges to investigate which mosquitoes and regions are most and least vulnerable to climate warming. We find that several of the most medically important mosquito vector species, including Ae. aegypti and An. gambiae, have positive thermal safety margins across the majority of their ranges when realistic assumptions of mosquito behavioral thermoregulation are incorporated. On average, the lowest climate vulnerability, in terms of both the magnitude and duration of thermal safety, was just south of the equator and at northern temperate range edges, and the highest climate vulnerability was in the subtropics. Mosquitoes living in regions including the Middle East, the western Sahara, and southeastern Australia, which are largely comprised of desert and xeric shrubland biomes, have the highest climate vulnerability across vector species.
预计气候变暖将对全球蚊媒疾病格局产生重大影响,但这些影响在不同疾病系统和地区会有所不同。了解哪些疾病以及在其分布范围内的哪些地方最有可能出现这些影响,对于制定公共卫生干预措施至关重要。虽然研究主要集中在潜在的变暖驱动的病媒传播范围扩大上,但对于病媒可能因变暖而面临压力甚至局部灭绝的可能性了解较少。在保护生物学中,气候变暖对物种的风险通常通过脆弱性指数来量化,如热安全边际——生物体的热上限与其栖息地温度之间的差异。在这里,我们估计了8种蚊子的热安全边际,这些蚊子是疟疾、登革热、基孔肯雅热、寨卡病毒、西尼罗河病毒和其他主要虫媒病毒的病媒,在它们已知的分布范围内进行调查,以确定哪些蚊子和地区最易和最不易受到气候变暖的影响。我们发现,当纳入蚊子行为体温调节的现实假设时,包括埃及伊蚊和冈比亚按蚊在内的几种医学上最重要的蚊媒物种在其大部分分布范围内都有正的热安全边际。平均而言,就热安全的幅度和持续时间而言,气候脆弱性最低的地区在赤道以南和北温带范围边缘,而气候脆弱性最高的地区在亚热带。生活在包括中东、撒哈拉西部和澳大利亚东南部等地区的蚊子,这些地区主要由沙漠和干旱灌木丛生物群落组成,在所有病媒物种中气候脆弱性最高。