Assessment of climate change impact on the malaria vector Anopheles hyrcanus, West Nile disease, and incidence of melanoma in the Vojvodina Province (Serbia) using data from a regional climate model

Date
2020-01Author
Mihailović, Dragutin
Petrić, Dušan
Petrović, Tamaš
Hrnjaković Cvjetković, Ivana
Đurđević, Vladimir
Nikolić-Đorić, Emilija
Arsenić, Ilija
Petrić, Mina
Mimić, Gordan
Ignjatović-Ćupina, Aleksandra
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Motivated by the One Health paradigm, we found the expected changes in temperature and
UV radiation (UVR) to be a common trigger for enhancing the risk that viruses, vectors, and
diseases pose to human and animal health. We compared data from the mosquito field collections
and medical studies with regional climate model projections to examine the impact
of climate change on the spreading of one malaria vector, the circulation of West Nile virus
(WNV), and the incidence of melanoma. We analysed data obtained from ten selected
years of standardised mosquito vector sampling with 219 unique location-year combinations,
and 10 years of melanoma incidence. Trends in the observed data were compared to
the climatic variables obtained by the coupled regional Eta Belgrade University and Princeton
Ocean Model for the period 1961–2015 using the A1B scenario, and the expected
changes up to 2030 were presented. Spreading and relative abundance of Anopheles hyrcanus
was positively correlated with the trend of the mean annual temperature. We anticipated
a nearly twofold increase in the number of invaded sites up to 2030. The frequency of
WNV detections in Culex pipiens was significantly correlated to overwintering temperature
averages and seasonal relative humidity at the sampling sites. Regression model projects a
twofold increase in the incidence of WNV positive Cx. pipiens for a rise of 0.5˚C in overwintering
TOctober–April temperatures. The projected increase of 56% in the number of days with
Tmax � 30˚C (Hot Days—HD) and UVR doses (up to 1.2%) corresponds to an increasing
trend in melanoma incidence. Simulations of the Pannonian countries climate anticipate
warmer and drier conditions with possible dominance of temperature and number of HD over other ecological factors. These signal the importance of monitoring the changes to the
preparedness of mitigating the risk of vector-borne diseases and melanoma.