KV ForHumHealth 5 9 07 3

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Slide1: 

Recent Awareness of How Human Activities and Land-uses are Linked to Human Health and Disease Transmission among Humans and Animals Story by AM/CLH , Photo by ANWAR MIRZA, REUTERS NEWS PICTURE SERVICE Hong Kong kills 8,300 chickens as bird flu found CHINA: February 3, 2003 Ban on importing or exporting meat because of mad cow disease

Slide2: 

Evelyn Hockstein/Polaris, for The New York Times Soldiers in Uíge wore biohazard suits while burying two bodies even though dead not known to have Marburg virus. Stalking a Deadly Virus, Battling a Town's Fears By SHARON LaFRANIERE and Denise Grady; April 17, 2005 – New York Times Evelyn Hockstein/Polaris, for The New York Times Health workers decontaminate body - died due to Marburg virus & wrapped it in a protective shroud.

Slide3: 

Vietnamese Boy Disabled by Agent Orange in a Ho Chi Minh City Hospital VIETNAM : February 28, 2005 A Vietnamese boy disabled by Agent Orange gets the attention of a volunteer while sitting in his cot in a Ho Chi Minh City hospital, February 25, 2005. “On Monday, a New York court will begin hearing a lawsuit brought by more than 100 Vietnamese seeking compensation and a clean-up of contaminated areas from more than 30 firms, among them Dow Chemical Co and Monsanto Co, the largest makers of Agent Orange. Agent Orange, named after the colour of its containers, is blamed for nightmarish birth defects in Vietnam where babies appeared with two heads or without eyes or arms.” Story by Adrees Latif AL/CCK, Photo by ADREES LATIF, REUTERS NEWS PICTURE SERVICE

Forests and Human Health: 

Forests and Human Health Human Health links to Forests Introduction – complex factors interlinked to disease 3. Factors accelerating the spread of contagious diseases Two Case Studies – show forest link to disease

Leading causes of deaths (1997): 

Leading causes of deaths (1997) Link between forests and source of disease? Insect vectors very adaptable to human social systems. Used to be adapted to forest environment and bred in tree holes but now discarded tires, drains, water cans Aids

Slide6: 

eg Tuberculosis 1997 data Important in Forests, tropics FORESTS IMPORTANT? Deforestation causes insect vectors to move to cities

Factors accelerating spread of contagious diseases: Global Factors: 

Factors accelerating spread of contagious diseases: Global Factors High human population densities Poor sanitary conditions - contact with water, food contaminated with human waste Speed, frequency of modern travel Use of excess chemicals (fertilizers, pesticides, etc) against insect vectors, increase growth of food crops Climate change, climatic events

Forests and Human Health: 

Forests and Human Health Introduction – complex factors interlinked to disease Genetics – Environment – Nutrition – Social – Political factors - Resource uses

Nutrition, Food Security, Poverty = Human Health : 

Nutrition, Food Security, Poverty = Human Health Food security - inability to obtain sufficient food on a day-to-day basis Higher incidence of infectious diseases when undernourished - can’t afford medicine or medicine not available Poverty greatest threat to food security & human health

Slide10: 

A poor environment will contribute to a poor diet and negatively affect nutrition Poor nutrition may contribute to diseases & their emergence

High Health = Low Sickness Eating a Balanced Diet: 

USDA Food Pyramid High Health = Low Sickness Eating a Balanced Diet

Slide12: 

What nourishment exists from eating monkeys? Central Africa eat primates when antelopes are scarce. BUT this is food in many parts of the world if you are fortunate In tropics, 50% of protein consumed by people from bushmeat & war stops agriculture so more dependent on bushmeat

Slide13: 

When and what in forests contribute to Human health problems?

Forests and Human Health – link is human behavior in landscape: 

Forests and Human Health – link is human behavior in landscape Factors accelerating spread contagious diseases Global factors – people, sanitary conditions, travel, chemical uses, climate change Land use changes Moving into or through interior, remote forest areas – close contact humans to wildlife Wars - Hunting for bushmeat, selling animal parts for medicinal purposes

Slide15: 

- climate determines insect outbreaks (eg malaria, dengue fever) Temperature = Insects sensitive to climate - affects timing, intensity of outbreaks (minimum air temp 15-18C needed for development of malaria parasite, threshold temps >20C set off epidemic) [what is average room temperature??] Drought (combined with AIDS, poverty, war, bad governments, corruption) – extreme starvation > poor health > higher disease susceptibility Factors accelerating spread of contagious diseases: Global Factors

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CLIMATIC EVENTS - climate determines insect outbreaks Higher rainfall = more malaria outbreaks in world with more rain & increases in night time temperatures during El Nino - El Nino 1987, malaria increased significantly in Rwanda - El Nino 1997/98 worst in history with torrential rains in East Africa – malaria epidemics in Uganda highlands

Slide17: 

Factors accelerating spread of contagious diseases: Land Use Changes Deforestation Replace forests with crop farming, ranching and small animals Which vegetation regrows after deforestation Water bodies in disrupted areas Road construction Mining WHY affect health? - Creates supportive habitat for parasites & their vectors, increase spread disease organisms = (cattle, pigs, chickens serve as host for disease)

Slide18: 

Forests: heavily shaded not have free standing water (thick organic layers on ground) so few breeding ground for mosquitoes Trees adapted to get rid of excess water Cleared land: more sunlight prone to water puddles crops (sugar cane, rice) use of irrigation ditches – good breeding habitats Why extensive deforestation in tropics affect disease spread and its vectors?

Slide19: 

DEFORESTATION: - most disruptive change affecting parasitic vector populations. Exposed ground becomes great breeding habitat for mosquitoes (e.g. increase in incidence of malaria)

Slide21: 

Malaysia – 50 year repeat growing of rubber had cyclic malaria epidemics Trinidad – 1940s cut forests, trees came back with lots bromeliads in canopy (hold water and preferred breeding site of malaria mosquitoes). - Removal bromeliads, malaria prevalence decreased Replacement of forests with rubber plantations or other vegetation

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Aechmea chantinii (Leinbach) http://www.charlies-web.com/bromeliads-alphalist/tex365.html Aechmea nidularioides Frogs die and fertilize plants but also mosquitoes use as breeding ground

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ROADS Road Construction into previously inaccessible forests: Erosion, create ponds – breeding sites disease vectors Roads allow construction workers, loggers, miners, tourists, conservationists to travel to new areas – expose new diseases (no immunity like forest dwellers); animals –exposed to new diseases

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http://www.webshots.com/explains/outdoors/indian-ocean.html Bali`s rice fields... published by nature4u2 in scenery & nature on 2001-07-31 last update on 2003-04-29 http://www.delange.org/TucumePyramids/TucumePyramids.htm http://it.inmagine.com/agriculture-immagini-photos/pixtal-pt055 STANDING POOLS OF WATER – GREAT HABITAT FOR MOSQUITOES

Slide25: 

- increase contact between wildlife and humans in interior forest areas (e.g. increase Ebola, AIDS) Factors accelerating spread of contagious diseases: Moving into or through interior, remote forest areas – close contact humans to wildlife

Slide26: 

Forest dwellers immune but NOT OUTSIDERS economic development (mining, timber, water for hydro electric plants, irrigation), legal/illegal trade, drugs moving people with no immunity into regions Outsiders exposed to new diseases from contact with animals or changing land-uses Interior, remote forest areas: forest dwellers no immunity to new diseases from outside regions

Slide27: 

Wars – factors accelerating spread disease Decrease food security and people’s health in general which makes people more susceptible to diseases and premature death Resettling people or people spontaneously migrating. Example Indonesia, resettling people from densely populated islands of Java and Bali to more sparsely populated and densely forested outer island where people not have immunity to malaria and where the plasmodium thrive in conditions created by the development project (Prothero 1999). Most people who move are poorly educated and do not know how to protect themselves against malaria and other health risks (Prothero 1999)

Humans are also dangerous to the Health of Forest Animals!! Human contact with animals makes animals sick!!!!: 

Humans are also dangerous to the Health of Forest Animals!! Human contact with animals makes animals sick!!!!

Slide29: 

Polio-like virus epidemic spread from a village; 15 chimpanzees severely crippled or died in 1960s, Tanzania Polio like virus & flu like epidemic killed 11 chimpanzees in Democratic Republic of Congo, 2003 Great Apes - Documented outbreaks of scabies, intestinal parasites, yaws (syphilis-like), respiratory infections similar to measles from human contacts - Ebola has killed up to 90% of the apes in central Africa Outbreaks of disease in chimpanzees, great apes of human origin:

Slide30: 

Illnesses in villages next to Park (% people with symptoms), Kibale National Park, Uganda: Fever = 82% Coughing = 64% Respiratory distress = 26% Diarrhea = 24% Vomiting = 24% General Illness = 22% Outbreaks of disease in chimpanzees, great apes of human origin :

Slide31: 

International Gorilla Conservation Programme ask tourists: Keep minimum distance between tourists and gorillas at 5 to 7 m Use facemasks reduce transmission airborne diseases Prior to visit, tourists wash hands & disinfect feet Construct adequate pit latrines so proper disposal human wastes Refuse tourists entry if sick

Slide32: 

Two Case Studies – show forest link to disease Malaria, forests, environmental change and people (All 4 impact: climate change, land use change, people moving into remote forest areas, wars) Acorns, white footed mouse/deer, ticks, bacteria, Lyme disease, forest fragmentation (impact: land use change – others less relevant)

Slide33: 

Malaria, forests, environmental change, people Malaria originated in Africa – fossils of mosquitoes 30 million years old; Plasmodium parasites highly specific - man only vertebrate host, Anopheles mosquitoes as vectors (parasite specificity - long, adaptive relationship with humans) Commonly called “forest malaria” Reasons where found – year round rainfall, temperatures where mosquitoes breed continuously Forests fringes – most malarious where ecological conditions favor disease

Slide34: 

In 1990, 80% cases in Africa, remainder clustered in nine countries: India, Brazil, Afghanistan, Sri-Lanka, Thailand, Indonesia, Vietnam, Cambodia, China. The map indicates current distribution of indigenous malaria according to WHO http://www.wehi.edu.au/MalDB-www/intro.html Malaria in 91 countries NOTE WHERE FOUND! ARE THERE NO MOSQUITOES IN THE NORTHERN LATITUDES (BOREAL FORESTS, TUNDRA)? ?? ??

Slide35: 

Anopheles Mosquitos - http://www.wehi.edu.au/MalDB-www/intro.html TODAY Malaria endemic to tropics, with extensions into subtropics but 18th century North America had malaria in lowland forests but eradicated it Malaria spread by travelers flying - cause death in non-malarious areas.

Slide36: 

Heliconia – high abundance after agriculture abandonment in American tropics Building Panama Canal, found linked to incidence of malaria since good mosquito breeding ground

Slide37: 

Left, United Nations; Corbis Use of DDT works as an insecticide to control but conflicts over other effects of DDT even though DDT only effective control of mosquitoes

Slide38: 

Control measures: spraying with DDT coating marshes with paraffin draining stagnant water Preventive Measures: Safest anti-malarial drug (chloroquine) no longer works as well since malaria parasite becoming immune

Slide39: 

The top photograph of a Unicef spraying with DDT in Paraguay was exhibited at the 1964-65 World's Fair Unicef; Ian Berry/Magnum Bottom picture, assault on mosquitos -- without DDT -- in Burundi in 2003 Unicef; Ian Berry/Magnum

Slide40: 

Lyme Disease Acorns White footed mouse/deer Ticks Bacteria Forest fragmentation - a case study not mainly in the tropics but found globally and significant in the temperate region (becoming big concern even in western US) Lyme Disease Slide 32

Slide41: 

Center for Disease Control and Prevention = 17,730 cases Lyme disease in 2000; Disease found in 44 states, only 6 free from Lyme disease HUMANS and Lyme disease = Fatigue Sore joints Heart damage Arthritis Memory loss

Slide42: 

White footed mouse http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/media/phil/pln1.jpg White Oak acorns http://www.bowsite.com/bowsite/features/armchair_biologist/acorns/acorns.html; http://www.bartelart.com/acorn.htm Animals, trees, people health all connected to Lyme disease Deer and mice are hosts for bacteria

Slide43: 

Acorn masting high every 2-5 years in oaks High food for mouse – increase their #s http://lucas.osu.edu/gm/tufc.htm, White footed mouse http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/media/phil/peromyscus_leucopus_37.jpg Gypsy Moth – an invasive introduced silk making in US, great mouse food

Slide44: 

More food = MORE MICE Ticks have more animals to bite to get blood = # ticks increases More ticks with bacteria causing Lyme Ticks bite humans – Lyme disease #1 #2 #3

Slide45: 

Ticks Allan et al. 2002 Small forest patch (< 3 acres) Large forest patch > 3 acres

Slide46: 

WHY DOES FOREST SIZE AFFECT INCIDENCE OF LYME DISEASE? White-footed mouse - at home in forest, field, your house http://encarta.msn.com/encnet/refpages/RefMedia.aspx?refid=461517523&artrefid=761565627&sec=-1&pn=1 Loss of predators (foxes, weasels) Loss of competitors (chipmunks, squirrels) No controls on populations so increase esp. forest patch < 5 acres

Slide47: 

Both plans provide 36 home sites, Which better for ticks? Conventional development strategy worst for ticks, Lyme disease when forest tract cut up into small pieces with lawns Better - cluster houses in large area of undeveloped forest Conventional Subdivision Cluster Housing (Open-Space Zoning)

Slide48: 

http://www.sefut.uni-freiburg.de/bilder/Nassreisanbau.pdf Future drivers of Deforestation

Slide49: 

- most disruptive change affecting parasitic vector populations. Exposed ground becomes great breeding habitat for mosquitoes (e.g. increase in incidence of malaria) - increase contact between wildlife and humans in interior forest areas (e.g. increase Ebola, AIDS)