Zika and Climate

Aedes Aegypti in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, author Muhammad Mahdi Karim, source Wikimedia
Aedes Aegypti in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, author Muhammad Mahdi Karim, source Wikimedia

Guest essay by Eric Worrall

The Australian Journal of Pharmacy has just tried to link climate change, to the terrifying Zika Virus outbreak in South and Central America. The Zika Virus, a mosquito born disease, has been implicated in an upsurge of serious birth defects.

CLIMATE CHANGE COULD WORSEN DISEASES LIKE ZIKA VIRUS

The news of an outbreak of the Zika virus in South America is a grim reminder of the health hazards associated with a warming world, Climate and Health Alliance Executive Director Fiona Armstrong said today.

A study published in the journal Emerging Infectious Diseases this week documents the spread of the virus in Columbia, while Brazil is experiencing the largest known outbreak of Zika virus, which is being linked to the deaths of babies affected by microencephaly, or abnormally small brains.

“Regions with increasing average temperatures are at increased risk of mosquito-borne diseases, as mosquitoes thrive in and move to warmer regions,” says Armstrong.

Read more: https://ajp.com.au/news/climate-change-could-worsen-diseases-like-zika-virus/

The abstract of the referenced study;

Zika virus (ZIKV) is an arthropodborne member of the genus Flavivirus of the Spondweni serocomplex and is transmitted by Aedes mosquitoes (primarily Ae. aegypti in urban and periurban cycles). ZIKV emerged in Africa and has caused outbreaks of febrile disease that clinically resemble dengue fever and other arboviral diseases (1) but has been linked to neurologic syndromes and congenital malformation (2). Outbreaks have been reported in the Yap islands of the Federated States of Micronesia (3), French Polynesia (4), and Oceania; Brazil is currently experiencing the first reported local transmission of ZIKV in the Americas (5).

The future spread of ZIKV is unpredictable, but the history of ZIKV has been reminiscent of chikungunya virus (CHIKV), which reemerged in Africa and now circulates on all inhabited continents and is a major global health problem. ZIKV has been found in Colombia and is likely following the path of CHIKV, which reached the country in August 2014 (6). The virus co-circulates with other Ae. aegypti–transmitted arboviruses, including dengue virus (DENV) and yellow fever virus. We report ZIKV infection in Colombia and a recent ongoing outbreak in Sincelejo, Colombia, with resulting illness characterized by maculopapular rash, fever, myalgia/arthralgia, and conjunctivitis.

During October–November 2015, a total of 22 patients received a presumptive diagnosis of an acute viral illness by emergency department physicians at the Centro de Diagnostico Medico-Universidad de Sucre in Sincelejo. The patients began treatment for a dengue-like illness, and blood samples were obtained for diagnosis. The samples were analyzed at the Universidad de Sucre by using reverse transcription PCR (RT-PCR) to detect DENV, CHIKV, or ZIKV. Viral RNA was extracted from the serum samples by using the ZR Viral RNA Kit (Zymo Research, Irvine, CA, USA); reverse transcription was performed by using the Protoscript First Strand cDNA Synthesis Kit (New England Biolabs, Ipswich, MA, USA). Amplicons were produced by using the OneTaq Quick-Load 2X Master Mix (New England Biolabs) with primers specific to DENV (7), CHIKV (forward: 5′-CGCCAACATTCTGCTTACAC-3′; reverse: 5′-AGGATGCCGGTCATTTGAT-3′), and ZIKV. The CHIKV amplification target was 649 bp of nonstructural protein 1 (NS1). A positive PCR for a partial region of the envelope (E) gene with primers ZIKVENVF and ZIKVENVR (8) was considered indicative of ZIKV infection. ZIKV primers specific for the E gene and NS1 were designed and used to amplify the E gene and NS1 for phylogenetic analyses, and amplicons were produced by using the OneTaq One-Step RT-PCR Kit (New England Biolabs). E gene and NS1 PCR products were sequenced at the University of Wisconsin–Madison Biotechnology Center (Madison, WI, USA).

Thumbnail of Majority-rule consensus tree based on Zika virus envelope and nonstructural protein 1 gene sequences (2,604 nt) of isolates from patients in Sincelejo, Colombia, October–November 2015, compared with reference isolates. The tree was constructed on the basis of Bayesian phylogenetic analysis with 8 million generations and a general time-reversible substitution model using MrBayes software version 3.2 (http://mrbayes.sourceforge.net). Numbers to the right of nodes represent posterior p

Samples from all patients were negative by RT-PCR for DENV and CHIKV; samples from 9 (41%) patients were positive for ZIKV. Among those 9 patients, 7 (78%) were male; median age was 23; and none had a history of international travel. ZIKV was analyzed by sequencing the E gene and NS1 of 2 isolates. Phylogenetic analyses rooted with Spondweni virus showed that the ZIKV sequences belonged to the Asian lineage (Figure) and were closely related to strains isolated during the 2015 outbreak in Brazil (5). The sequences also showed 99% identity with sequences from a ZIKV isolate from French Polynesia (GenBank accession no. KJ776791) (9). These data suggest that ZIKV circulating in Colombia could have been imported from Brazil, most likely as a result of tourism activities on Colombia’s northern coast, where the first reported case was identified (the state of Bolivar).

We report ZIKV infection in Colombia in association with an ongoing outbreak of acute maculoexantematic illness. Since detection of ZIKV in Sincelejo, a total of 13,500 cases have been identified in 28 of the country’s 32 territorial entities (10), all of which have abundant populations of Ae. aegypti mosquitoes and co-circulation of DENV and CHIKV. These circumstances highlight the need for accurate laboratory diagnostics and suggest that monitoring whether the virus spreads into neighboring countries (e.g., Ecuador, Peru, Venezuela, and Panama) is imperative.

Erwin Camacho, Margaret Paternina-Gomez, Pedro J. Blanco, Jorge E. Osorio, and Matthew T. AliotaComments to Author

Author affiliations: University of Wisconsin–Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, USA (E. Camacho, J.E. Osorio, M.T. Aliota); Universidad de Sucre, Sincelejo, Colombia (M. Paternina-Gomez, P.J. Blanco)

Read more: http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/22/5/16-0023_article

It is true that Aedes Aegypti, the mosquito which carries Zika, lives in tropical and subtropical regions. Global warming, if it occurs, might increase the range of Aegypti. But there are close relatives of Aegypti, such as Aedes Albopictus, which might be just as dangerous. Albopictus has a much greater range than Aegypti, but carries similar viral diseases to Aegypti. I don’t know whether Albopictus can carry Zika, but this has to be considered as a significant possibility.

Albopictus is currently spreading through temperate zones in Europe, and has been detected as far North as Germany.

Even if it turns out only Aegypti can carry Zika, I doubt the most efficient response to dangerous mosquito borne diseases is to build a few wind turbines.

A good start to controlling mosquito borne diseases, might be to remove the pointless bureaucratic obstacles to spraying DDT, one of the most effective anti-mosquito chemicals ever developed.

Use of DDT was almost outlawed after vigorous scare campaigns by green groups, but this much maligned chemical is harmless to humans. Professor Kenneth Mellanby, who campaigned for the use of DDT in the 1940s, used to eat a substantial pinch of concentrated DDT as part of his demonstration. Mellanby did not suffer any health problems from his massive consumption of DDT – he died in 1993, at the age of 85 years.

Part of the reason DDT was and is so popular in the third world, is DDT is very easy to produce, a simple one step reaction any backyard lab could perform. With a few litres of precursor chemicals, an amateur laboratory could produce enough DDT for thousands of treatments. I suspect if authorities don’t remove bureaucratic obstacles to DDT use, people in Zika affected regions might start cooking their own.

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willhaas
January 29, 2016 8:38 pm

The climate change we have been experiencing is caused by the sun and the oceans and Mankind does not have the power to alter it. So if current climate change is responsible for Zika spreading then Zitka will spread and we do not have the power to stop it.

Leo G
January 29, 2016 8:41 pm

The link drawn by the CDC between Zika virus infection and microcephaly appears highly fanciful and I wonder to what extent it may be misreported.
Microcephaly, including congenital microcephaly, is not a rare condition- it cannot be. The Microcephaly is defined by head size compared with the normal population distribution of head sizes. The threshold is at 2 standard deviations below the mean, so 2.3% of the population are expected to be microcephalic.
I expect that the reports from Brazil of microcephaly at birth must be for a peculiar and rarer syndromic form and probably at -3SD or -4SD, but that is not clearly stated- nor is the association with Zika virus infection.

ozspeaksup
Reply to  Leo G
January 30, 2016 4:34 am

something no one seems to have mentioned either is fetal alcohol syndrome
smaller brains and sometimes head size as well..and a father whos an alcoholic is as possible to pass it onto a baby as an alcoholic mum as well.
I still suspect the DTAP Vaccine as the most likely cause of the “outbreak”
Zika has been around too long.

LewSkannen
January 29, 2016 9:15 pm

If you have no principles as a political activist it doesn’t take you long to your activist bandwagon to any crisis. I remember that every bush fire we have had in Australia has been the fault of ‘climate change’, along with every snow storm in the Northern Hemisphere. Every war and now every virus. I guess there is nothing for which CO2, and hence western civilization, cannot be blamed.

Leon Brozyna
January 29, 2016 10:16 pm

Here we have utter stupidity on display once again … as though the environment is a static, unchanging thing and only changes because of man’s actions. All diseases are always changing. A new virus could spring up next week seemingly out of nowhere, anywhere on the planet and in less than a decade have a devastating impact on the human race. All it takes is one genetic roll of the dice by any reproducing organism and mankind could find itself having its own extinction event.

Richard Keen
January 29, 2016 10:25 pm

Didn’t Climate Change help bring on the great plague, the Black Death of 1346? Something called the Little Ice Age?

pat
January 29, 2016 10:49 pm

and if a link is not established? we’re left with nothing but hype over a mild virus.
28 Jan: WHO: WHO Director-General (Margaret Chan) briefs Executive Board on Zika situation
A causal relationship between Zika virus infection and birth malformations and neurological syndromes HAS NOT YET BEEN ESTABLISHED, but is strongly suspected
http://www.who.int/dg/speeches/2016/zika-situation/en/

4TimesAYear
January 29, 2016 11:04 pm

Just don’t let them blame this on climate change. Dr. Paul Reiter’s video needs a lot more views – he had his name removed from the IPCC report because they wouldn’t listen to him. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-iZPkQWcRsI
There is also an article by Dr. Reiter here: http://news.heartland.org/newspaper-article/2008/02/01/modern-transportation-not-global-warming-allowing-spread-mosquito-relat

M Simon
January 29, 2016 11:11 pm

Could the outbreak be caused by genetically modified mosquitoes?
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-01-29/zika-outbreak-epicenter-same-area-genetically-modified-mosquitoes-released-2015
A fairly technical explanation. Despite the url.

Reply to  M Simon
January 30, 2016 3:43 pm

Correlation is not causation.

Martin Lewitt
January 29, 2016 11:32 pm

Any place where this mosquito would be a threat, probably should already have control programs in place for West Nile and St. Louis encephalitis.

indefatigablefrog
January 29, 2016 11:41 pm

Substitute explanation depending on time and geographical location:
All diseases and food shortages are caused by:
1: Angry gods and only priests can save us.
2: The activities of the America and CIA agents and only Stalin and Lysenko can save us.
3. Capitalism causing evil carbon pollution a.k.a. Climate Change and only Michael Mann, Al Gore, David Suzuki, John Cook, Stephan Lewandowsky, Naomi Oreskes/Klein, Ban Ki Moon etc can save us.
Misattribution of the factors which cause a problem can very often lead to solutions which are worse than the disease which they pretend to cure.
“Every age has its peculiar folly: Some scheme, project, or fantasy into which it plunges, spurred on by the love of gain, the necessity of excitement, or the force of imitation.” Charles Mackay, 1841.

Marcus
Reply to  indefatigablefrog
January 30, 2016 8:55 am

The road to Hell is paved with liberal good intentions !!

Richard
January 30, 2016 1:37 am

Advertising companies love the words , could , might , possibly,
It doesn’t have to be true , just implies.
Carlsberg probably the best beer in the world, nowhere near but cannot tell them to remove that implication.

Russell
January 30, 2016 2:38 am

Summary: Global trade with used tires causes spread of mosquitoes and mosquito-borne disease, not climate change – excellent presentation!!! Thank You 4TimesAYear. his name removed from the IPCC report because they wouldn’t listen to him. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-iZPkQWcRsI every one should watch.

michael hart
Reply to  Russell
January 30, 2016 8:18 am

Yes. That’s a superb talk.

Charlie
January 30, 2016 4:13 am

every one should watch.
I’ll second that, Russell. The corruption of the science in this particular field by IPCC bandits is laid bare.

Russell
Reply to  Charlie
January 30, 2016 5:32 am

Charlie : The bad thing Government do to our lives; The US Government promoted smoking cigarettes, knowingly from 1940 through1980’s ; that it was the leading cause of cancer and death from cancer. It causes cancers of the lung, esophagus, larynx, mouth, throat, kidney, bladder, liver, pancreas, stomach, cervix, colon, and rectum, as well as acute myeloid leukemia. They covered this up by blaming Cholesterol i.e. saturated fat. This Cover up is well over 50 years old, and still goes on today. The greatest type 2 diabetes epidemic of today, leading to most if not all chronic illness. This lipid hypothesis has no scientific proof they just keep on lying.

Russell
Reply to  Russell
January 30, 2016 5:38 am
mwhite
January 30, 2016 4:43 am
mwhite
January 30, 2016 4:47 am

Seems the “Experts” don’t know that it originated in Africa. Or more likely, who cares about the truth, we just want a scary headline.

Simon
Reply to  mwhite
February 3, 2016 11:53 am

Mmmmm ….. so you don’t think this is scary?

Reply to  Simon
February 3, 2016 12:51 pm

Simon said “Fair enough …. so places where it was cooler before, but warmer now, that have nectar, protein and water…. are at greater risk to the spread of this bug. I’d say that is something to watch wouldn’t you?”
As per the article, at 50 degrees F they shut down or go into hibernation. So, for example, where I live, they aren’t active until it’s over 50F, and the warmer it gets the more active they become. They like it over 80F. But there’s a 30 degree difference between the two. So, technically, ANY place on the planet that gets over 50F during the year, and where there is water, nectar and protein, is going to have mosquitoes. Whether it has “warmed up” or not.
This particular virus-“Zika” isn’t something that is genetic to mosquitoes. They have to contract it from a human, and then they have to bite, or transfer it, to another human. Almost every place on the planet has mosquitoes, and cooling the planet back down an “average” of 0.8 degrees wouldn’t kill them all off either. You’re being silly.

Reply to  Simon
February 3, 2016 1:00 pm

Why is it “scary”? There is ZERO evidence to support the claim that Zika causes birth defects of any kind, and the virus itself is fairly mild and doesn’t kill people like Malaria or Dengue fever does. If getting sick from mosquitoes was terrifying, no one would ever travel anywhere. But they do.
“Travelers frequently contract diseases, from malaria to measles, while abroad. The CDC diagnosed 14 returning travelers with Zika from 2007 to 2014. None of these cases sparked Zika outbreaks.”
“…most people infected with Zika clear the virus from their blood in less than a week. Mosquitoes can only become infected with the virus if they bite someone during that short window of time.”
—1 in 5 people exposed to Zika become ill. (20%) Symptoms are mild and last about a week and can include, rash, fever, pink eye, and join pain. (So basically a FLU like illness.)
The birth defects have been “associated” with the Zika outbreak in Brazil, but only 6 of the babies and their mothers (out of 4,000 children born with microcephaly) had Zika antibodies in their blood….so that simply cannot be the cause of the birth defects.
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/2016/01/28/who-warns-zika-spread/79451430/

Mark
January 30, 2016 4:50 am

Back in the 70s when I was in the forces,in central America we used to spray DDT every night at dusk.We had a colony of breeding Herons downwind and lots of Terrapins just outside the perimeter none seemed affected and all wildlife seemed to carry on regardless but mosquitos disappeared.Greens have a lot to answer for.

Mark
Reply to  Mark
January 30, 2016 4:59 am

And the Heron colony is still there now.

Vincent
January 30, 2016 8:00 am

Cooking my own DDT – now there’s a proposal. I’m sick and tired of the sleepless nights from the useless creatures & that is enough reason to start making my own plans.

Patrick MJD
Reply to  Vincent
January 30, 2016 7:42 pm

You could get your own “Carnivorous” plants like the Venus fly trap.

ezra abrams
January 30, 2016 8:39 am

I am sure that people here hate it when the media pick out one extreme example, and then present it as “news”
I listen to WBUR, Boston NPR on my morning drive; at 9am, they present an hour of live BBC news.
The BBC announcer said, is zika related to climate change ?
The BBC then presented about 20 sec of audio from an expert who said, basically, nah, really hard to see climate change/zika, but zika is in NE Brazil which is in a typical El Nino drought, so that might be related…
so, WUWT is doing what you all hate: presenting a few silly media people as representative of anything other then, a lot of the media hypes stuff and is silly.

Marcus
January 30, 2016 8:53 am

..The greatest threat to Human survival is the fact that we no longer TRUST our scientists !!

January 30, 2016 9:27 am

DDT is currently allowed for mosquito control in all except a couple dozen countries, and the ones where it is not allowed are mostly ones without significant amounts of mosquito-borne disease. And the main reason for banning DDT either in those specific countries or for purposes other than mosquito control is not harm to humans, but harm to birds.

Reply to  Donald L. Klipstein
January 31, 2016 9:55 pm

Until I was five we lived near a lake. Well, a wide place in the river. It was fun punting on it, but every year I’d be covered in really itchy welts at a certain time of year. My father got the river unclogged so the wide shallow place went away, and so did the mosquitos that bred there. I was a bit cross about no more punting, but the welty weeks were times of misery. As far as I can tell https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DDT_in_New_Zealand my country is one of the “couple dozen” that don’t allow DDT, period. Apparently birds aren’t harmed as much as was claimed. My wife and I got a mystery mosquito-borne disease in Australia once. There are several there. As far as I can tell (http://www.chem.unep.ch/pops/POPs_Inc/proceedings/bangkok/HARRISON.html) DDT is no longer allowed for any use in Australia.
The sixth of the good lands which I, Ahura Mazda, created
was Hardôyu with its lake.
Thereupon came Angra Mainyu, who is all death,
and he counter-created by his witchcraft the stained mosquito.
(Vendidad. Not my religion, but shows people have disliked mosquitos for a long time.)

Bruce Cobb
January 30, 2016 3:36 pm

For Climate ghouls, anything bad can be linked to “climate”. Increased bad hair days? Climate. Halitosis? Climate. Heartbreak of psoriasis? Climate. Surly waiters? Climate. Etc. etc.

January 30, 2016 3:36 pm

Whatever it is, if it is big and scary, it is caused or exacerbated by CO2 and it is coming to get you!!

Khwarizmi
January 30, 2016 5:19 pm

There is grandeur in this view of Life™comment image

rtj1211
January 31, 2016 2:43 am

Isn’t a more workable hypothesis: ‘The CIA could introduce Zika Virus to a region it wishes to destroy…..’??