Walsh J F, Molyneux D H, Birley M H
Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, U.K.
Parasitology. 1993;106 Suppl:S55-75. doi: 10.1017/s0031182000086121.
This review addresses changes in the ecology of vectors and epidemiology of vector-borne diseases which result from deforestation. Selected examples are considered from viral and parasitic infections (arboviruses, malaria, the leishmaniases, filariases, Chagas Disease and schistosomiasis) where disease patterns have been directly or indirectly influenced by loss of natural tropical forests. A wide range of activities have resulted in deforestation. These include colonisation and settlement, transmigrant programmes, logging, agricultural activities to provide for cash crops, mining, hydropower development and fuelwood collection. Each activity influences the prevalence, incidence and distribution of vector-borne disease. Three main regions are considered--South America, West & Central Africa and South-East Asia. In each, documented changes in vector ecology and behaviour and disease pattern have occurred. Such changes result from human activity at the forest interface and within the forest. They include both deforestation and reafforestation programmes. Deforestation, or activities associated with it, have produced new habitats for Anopheles darlingi mosquitoes and have caused malaria epidemics in South America. The different species complexes in South-East Asia (A. dirus, A. minimus, A. balabacensis) have been affected in different ways by forest clearance with different impacts on malaria incidence. The ability of zoophilic vectors to adapt to human blood as an alternative source of food and to become associated with human dwellings (peridomestic behaviour) have influenced the distribution of the leishmaniases in South America. Certain species of sandflies (Lutzomyia intermedia, Lu. longipalpis, Lu. whitmani), which were originally zoophilic and sylvatic, have adapted to feeding on humans in peridomestic and even periurban situations. The changes in behaviour of reservoir hosts and the ability of pathogens to adapt to new reservoir hosts in the newly-created habitats also influence the patterns of disease. In anthroponotic infections, such as Plasmodium, Onchocerca and Wuchereria, changes in disease patterns and vector ecology may be more difficult to detect. Detailed knowledge of vector species and species complexes is needed in relation to changing climate associated with deforestation. The distributions of the Anopheles gambiae and Simulium damnosum species complexes in West Africa are examples. There have been detailed longitudinal studies of Anopheles gambiae populations in different ecological zones of West Africa. Studies on Simulium damnosum cytoforms (using chromosome identification methods) in the Onchocerciasis Control Programme were necessary to detect changes in distribution of species in relation to changed habitats. These examples underline the need for studies on the taxonomy of medically-important insects in parallel with long-term observations on changing habitats.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
本综述探讨了森林砍伐导致的病媒生态变化和病媒传播疾病的流行病学。从病毒和寄生虫感染(虫媒病毒、疟疾、利什曼病、丝虫病、恰加斯病和血吸虫病)中选取了一些例子,这些疾病模式直接或间接受天然热带森林丧失的影响。多种活动导致了森林砍伐。这些活动包括殖民化和定居、移民计划、伐木、种植经济作物的农业活动、采矿、水电开发和薪柴采集。每项活动都会影响病媒传播疾病的流行率、发病率和分布。主要考虑三个地区——南美洲、西非和中非以及东南亚。在每个地区,病媒生态和行为以及疾病模式都有记录在案的变化。这些变化是由森林边缘和森林内部的人类活动引起的。它们包括森林砍伐和重新造林计划。森林砍伐或与之相关的活动为达林按蚊创造了新的栖息地,并在南美洲引发了疟疾流行。东南亚不同的物种复合体(大劣按蚊、微小按蚊、巴拉巴按蚊)受到森林砍伐的不同影响,对疟疾发病率产生了不同的影响。嗜动物病媒适应人类血液作为替代食物来源并与人类住所相关联(家栖行为)的能力,影响了南美洲利什曼病的分布。某些原本嗜动物且生活在森林中的白蛉物种(中间白蛉、长须白蛉、惠特曼白蛉),已经适应在家栖甚至城郊环境中吸食人类血液。储存宿主行为的变化以及病原体在新创造栖息地中适应新储存宿主的能力也会影响疾病模式。在人源性感染中,如疟原虫、盘尾丝虫和班氏丝虫,疾病模式和病媒生态的变化可能更难察觉。需要详细了解与森林砍伐相关的气候变化下的病媒物种和物种复合体。西非冈比亚按蚊和丑恶蚋物种复合体的分布就是例子。在西非不同生态区对冈比亚按蚊种群进行了详细的纵向研究。在盘尾丝虫病控制计划中,对丑恶蚋细胞型(使用染色体鉴定方法)进行研究,对于检测与栖息地变化相关的物种分布变化是必要的。这些例子强调了在对不断变化的栖息地进行长期观测的同时,需要对医学上重要昆虫的分类学进行研究。(摘要截选至400字)