In the Amazon, deforestation is linked to higher malaria rates
Deforestation boosts malaria, while higher malaria rates mean less deforestation.
CATHLEEN O'GRADY - 10/21/2019, 10:36 AM
Aerial view of the Amazon rainforest, near Manaus the capital of the Brazilian state of Amazonas, Brazil.
In Brazil, the rapid deforestation of the Amazon has been accompanied by a rise in malaria. But did the deforestation help increase malaria rates? Or is something more complicated going on?
Researchers Andrew MacDonald and Erin Mordecai think there is in fact a more complicated story at play. In a paper published in PNAS last week, they report evidence suggesting that deforestation does lead to a rise in malariabut that at the same time, a rise in malaria reduces deforestation. The complicated relationship makes the effects difficult to tease out of the data. And together, the two effects mean that conservation and human health go hand in handwhat's good for one is good for the other.
Confusing evidence
Because malaria is spread by mosquitoes, it would be easy to think that humans have little to do with its prevalence if we're not killing mosquitos. But because human land use leads to habitat change for disease vectors like mosquitoes, human activity can dramatically change the risks of vector-borne diseases.
And there's evidence that it has. By the early 1960s, Brazil had seemed to get a handle on its malaria problem, going from a reported 6 million cases every year to fewer than 50,000. But in the 1960s, malaria started skyrocketing again, reaching more than 600,000 cases every year by the 21st century.
More:
https://arstechnica.com/science/2019/10/in-the-amazon-deforestation-is-linked-to-higher-malaria/