Avian malaria spreads north into interior Alaska

EnglishLady

Veteran Expediter
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (Reuters) - Malaria is infecting birds as far north as Alaska's interior, and a rapidly warming climate may be the reason the mosquito-borne disease appears to be advancing northward, a new study shows.

It is the first time scientists have detected the transmission of avian malaria in local birds at such far-north latitudes anywhere in North America, said the study, published on Wednesday in the scientific journal PLOS One.

"We now have shown that malaria is being transmitted in Alaska," said Ravinder Sehgal, a San Francisco State University biologist and a lead researcher on the project.

While tropical birds that migrate to Alaska in the summer are known to carry the disease, there had never been any documented cases of it spreading to non-migratory Alaska birds or birds newly hatched in Alaska that had not yet flown south, Sehgal said.

Longer periods of warm weather in the summer may be allowing the malaria parasite to thrive in Alaska and be transmitted by mosquitoes, Sehgal said.

"The question was, how far north is it getting, and is it going to get to birds that have never expressed it?" he said.

The study notes that temperatures have been increasing in the Arctic at almost twice the average global rate, and that the warming climate has changed vegetation in the far north.

The study evaluated blood samples taken last year from birds in Anchorage, Fairbanks and Coldfoot, a community north of the Arctic Circle. The researchers found avian malaria in resident and hatch-year birds in Anchorage and Fairbanks, though not as far north as Coldfoot.

Of 676 birds tested, 7.2 percent were found to be infected. Some of the hardest-hit birds were black-capped chickadees, Sehgal said. Of the black-capped chickadees tested in Anchorage, about 30 percent were infected.

Further studies are underway to try to determine what type of mosquito might be spreading the disease, Sehgal said.

It is unclear what effect avian malaria might have on the Alaska birds. For some species elsewhere, malaria transmissions are devastating, Sehgal said.

Penguins, which have no natural defenses against malaria, die when they are infected in zoos, he said. Malaria also has seriously damaged bird populations in Hawaii, where non-native mosquitoes have been introduced to the habitat.

But Alaskans need not fear for their health, Sehgal said. The study detected only avian malaria, which is different from the type of malaria that afflicts mammals.

"Certainly, it is not going to spread to humans," he said


Avian malaria spreads north into interior Alaska: study | Yahoo! Health
 

layoutshooter

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
The BBC is ALWAYS looking to blame man made 'global warm' or 'climate change' on everything. It could ALSO be caused by increasing migratory bird populations or even idiots bringing in infected tropical birds for pets. OR, the 'bug' has altered itself to more fit it's new environment. It good be cause by a million things, not just 'climate change'. It even COULD have been dormant in the ground since the last warm period, not all that long ago, when it was even WARMER in the arctic than it is now. You know, a cycle that has repeated itself since the earth has been.
 

EnglishLady

Veteran Expediter
The BBC is ALWAYS looking to blame man made 'global warm' or 'climate change' on everything. It could ALSO be caused by increasing migratory bird populations or even idiots bringing in infected tropical birds for pets. OR, the 'bug' has altered itself to more fit it's new environment. It good be cause by a million things, not just 'climate change'. It even COULD have been dormant in the ground since the last warm period, not all that long ago, when it was even WARMER in the arctic than it is now. You know, a cycle that has repeated itself since the earth has been.


Uh Hmmmm .... this was Reuters (USA Yahoo site) not the BBC ROFL :p :p
 

layoutshooter

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
Them too, they are all the same. Not to worry, the BBC will likely pick it up. (read that one wrong, didn't I? :eek:) It's still their fault.
 

layoutshooter

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
I was JUST going to blame Obama, rather politicians in general. It's all the hot air that politicians and the media spew as 'fact' that is causing the problem.

I also blame the 'scientists' that are up there 'proving' that man is the blame. All those ice breaking ships that they are running around in up there to 'show' how the ice is breaking up to 'prove' it's warming. MAYBE if they were NOT breaking it up it could refreeze better? NAW, they are pure, it's the evil oil companies fault.
 

EnglishLady

Veteran Expediter
I was JUST going to blame Obama, rather politicians in general. It's all the hot air that politicians and the media spew as 'fact' that is causing the problem.

I also blame the 'scientists' that are up there 'proving' that man is the blame. All those ice breaking ships that they are running around in up there to 'show' how the ice is breaking up to 'prove' it's warming. MAYBE if they were NOT breaking it up it could refreeze better? NAW, they are pure, it's the evil oil companies fault.


ROFL, now thats funny :p :p
 

layoutshooter

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
Columbus was running around looking for the "Northwest Passage" a few years back. Does anyone think that he just thought that idea up himself? OR Was there 'legends' or 'stories' from days when there WAS open water? It could also be the fault of the Roland dude who DID sail the 'Northwest Passage' back in 1906, when the ice pack was not quite as thick as it has been until what is just the LATEST time it has melted back.
 
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