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| Tamires da Costa, 16, who is four months pregnant, stands in a street with standing flood water next to her home in the Parque Sao Bento shantytown of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, earlier this year. |
“Zika is the kind of thing we’ve been ranting about for 20
years,” said Daniel Brooks, a biologist at University of Nebraska-Lincoln. “We
should’ve anticipated it. Whenever the planet has faced a major climate change
event, man-made or not, species have moved around and their pathogens have come
into contact with species with no resistance.”
It’s still not clear what role rising temperatures and
altered rainfall patterns have had on the spread of Zika, which is mainly
spread by mosquitos; the increased global movement of people is probably as
great an influence as climate change for the spread of infectious diseases. But
the World Health Organization, which declared a public health emergency over
the birth defects linked to Zika, is clear that changes in climate mean a
redrawn landscape for vector and water-borne diseases.
Read The Guardian
story - “Climate change may have helped spread Zika virus, according to WHO scientists.”

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