Posted by admin on 11 29th, 2011 | no responses

Climate change gives creepy, bat-carried disease a boost

by Sarah Laskow. In Australia, a virus called Hendra, which has had a 60 percent mortality rate in humans, is on the rise. There were 18 outbreaks of the disease this year, more than in the 16 previous years combined, and scientists suspect that climate change had a hand in this year's surge. An animal-borne disease like West Nile or SARS, Hendra can be transmitted from fruit bats to horses to humans. Only seven humans have been infected with Hendra so far, but scientists believe that flooding in Australia is connected with the increase in Hendra outbreaks. In this type of ecological upheaval, infected animals range more widely and encounter humans more often. Also, it stresses bats out, which makes them more likely to carry the virus. Australia's kind of screwed when it comes to climate change, which means there’s going to be more crazy bat-stressing weather, which means more diseases like Hendra could catapult into the ranks of truly nasty and widespread zoonotic diseases. (AIDS, anyone?) In short, we’re all going to die!

View original post here:
Climate change gives creepy, bat-carried disease a boost

More on SKCEA.org:

  • Here’s a template for your Occupy Wall Street sign
    by Jess Zimmerman. The Occupy Design group on Flickr has a lot of arresting images, including this one about oil company profits and subsidies. If you're not angry already, clicking through this set will probably help with that -- and then you can print out one of these desi...
  • Ozark Hellbender
    The Ozarks are a physiographic and geologic highland region of the central United States. It covers much of the southern half of Missouri and an extensive portion of northwestern and north central Arkansas. The region also extends westward into northeastern Oklahoma and extreme s...
  • US East coast braces for Irene
    As North Carolina braced on Friday for a direct hit from Hurricane Irene, cities along the east coast were on alert and millions of beach goers cut short vacations to escape the powerful storm. With more than 50 million people potentially in Irene's path, residents stocked up on ...
  • Climate change breaks NASA temperature chart
    by Christopher Mims. The temperature anomaly in the Arctic -- the amount that current temperatures differ from historical norms -- is now so severe that NASA's James Hansen had to add a new color to his charts in order to accurately depict it: Hot pink. In other words, last ...
  • The next phase of the Gulf oil disaster: lawyers and lobbyists descend
    by Randy Rieland. We've gone from a gush to a seep in the Gulf....

Comments »

No comments yet.

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URL

Leave a comment

*
To prove you're a person (not a spam script), type the security word shown in the picture. Click on the picture to hear an audio file of the word.
Click to hear an audio file of the anti-spam word