Emerging diseases and ecosystem instability: new threats to public health.
P R Epstein
Working Group on New and Resurgent Disease, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Mass.
Ecologists have begun to describe an environmental distresssyndrome, whereby widespread loss of top predators and harshenvironmental conditions are encouraging the selection of opportunisticpests and pathogens across a wide taxonomic range of plantsand animals. Environmental change and pollutants stress individualsand populations, and this may be reflected in the global resurgenceof infectious disease as these stresses cascade through thecommunity assemblages of species. In 1993, the sudden appearanceof a virulent, rodent-borne hantavirus in the arid US Southwestaccompanied anomalous weather patterns, and a novel Vibrio choleraevariant (O139 Bengal) emerged in Asia where marine ecosystemsare experiencing a pandemic of coastal algal blooms, apparentlyharboring and amplifying the agent. This paper suggests a frameworkfor integrating the surveillance of health outcomes and keyreservoir and vector species, with ecological and climatic monitoring.
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