Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumThawing permafrost exposes old pathogens--and new hosts
The Arcticthat remote, largely undisturbed, 5.5 million square miles of frozen terrainis heating up fast. In fact, its warming nearly four times quicker than the rest of the world, with disastrous consequences for the region and its inhabitants. Many of these impacts you probably know from nature documentaries: ice caps melting, sea levels rising, and polar bears losing their homes. But good news! There is another knock-on effect to worry about: the warming landscape is rewiring viral dynamics, with the potential to unleash new pathogens.
An underappreciated consequence of climate change is how it will exacerbate the spread of infectious disease. As the world heats up, many species are expected to up sticks and meander many miles away from their typical habitat, bringing various pathogens along with them for the ride. This means that previously unacquainted viruses and hosts will meet for the first time, potentially leading to viral spilloverwhere a virus jumps from one reservoir host to a new one, like our old friend SARS-CoV-2.
And a part of the world where this has a good chance of happening is the Arctic. In a new paper published in the journal the Proceedings of the Royal Society B, a group of researchers from the University of Ottawa tried to quantify the spillover risk in the region. They went to Lake Hazen, a freshwater lake in Canada located inside the Arctic Circle, and took samples of the soil and lake sediment, before sequencing the genetic material in these samples to identify what viruses were present. They also sequenced the genomes of potential hosts in the area, including animals and plants.
They then tried to gauge how likely it was that a virus might jump into a new species. To do this, they looked at the genetic history of a virus and its typical host. If a host and a virus show similar patterns in how they have evolved, it suggests that theyve lived in tandem for a long time, and that the virus doesnt tend to move into other species. If their patterns of evolution are very different, it suggests the virus has spent time living in other hosts, has jumped before, and is more likely to do so again.
https://arstechnica.com/science/2022/10/thawing-permafrost-exposes-old-pathogens-and-new-hosts/
Deep State Witch
(10,458 posts)It doesn't end well.
Midnight Writer
(21,803 posts)Such as the Amazon Rain Forest, tropical, moist ground that is perfect for the growth of pathogens.