Abstract

BackgroundThe future distribution of malaria in Africa is likely to be much more dependent on environmental conditions than the current distribution due to the effectiveness of indoor and therapeutic anti-malarial interventions, such as insecticide-treated nets (ITNs), indoor residual spraying for mosquitoes (IRS), artemisinin-combination therapy (ACT), and intermittent presumptive treatment (IPT). Future malaria epidemiology is therefore expected to be increasingly dominated by Anopheles arabiensis, which is the most abundant exophagic mosquito competent to transmit Plasmodium falciparum and exhibits a wide geographic range.MethodsTo map the potential distribution of An. arabiensis in Africa, ecological niche models were fit to 20th century collection records. Many common species distribution modelling techniques aim to discriminate species habitat from the background distribution of environments. Since these methods arguably result in unnecessarily large Type I and Type II errors, LOBAG-OC was used to identify the niche boundary using only data on An. arabiensis occurrences. The future distribution of An. arabiensis in Africa was forecasted by projecting the fit model onto maps of simulated climate change following three climate change scenarios.ResultsEcological niche modelling revealed An. arabiensis to be a climate generalist in the sense that it can occur in most of Africa’s contemporary environmental range. Under three climate change scenarios, the future distribution of An. arabiensis is expected to be reduced by 48%-61%. Map differences between baseline and projected climate suggest that habitat reductions will be especially extensive in Western and Central Africa; portions of Botswana, Namibia, and Angola in Southern Africa; and portions of Sudan, South Sudan, Somalia, and Kenya in East Africa. The East African Rift Valley and Eastern Coast of Africa are expected to remain habitable. Some modest gains in habitat are predicted at the margins of the current range in South Sudan, South Africa, and Angola.ConclusionIn summary, these results suggest that the future potential distribution of An. arabiensis in Africa is likely to be smaller than the contemporary distribution by approximately half as a result of climate change. Agreement among the three modelling scenarios suggests that this outcome is robust to a wide range of potential climate futures.

Highlights

  • The future distribution of malaria in Africa is likely to be much more dependent on environmental conditions than the current distribution due to the effectiveness of indoor and therapeutic anti-malarial interventions, such as insecticide-treated nets (ITNs), indoor residual spraying for mosquitoes (IRS), artemisinin-combination therapy (ACT), and intermittent presumptive treatment (IPT)

  • The decline of malaria in subSaharan Africa is generally attributed to anti-malarial interventions including the distribution of insecticidetreated nets (ITNs), artemisinin-combination therapy (ACT), intermittent presumptive treatment (IPT, [7]), and indoor residual spraying for mosquitoes (IRS), these cannot account for all observed reductions in malaria incidence [2]

  • Plotting of An. arabiensis occurrence points in this space shows that this species is a climate generalist in the sense that it can occur in most of Africa’s environmental range (Figure 3)

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Summary

Introduction

The future distribution of malaria in Africa is likely to be much more dependent on environmental conditions than the current distribution due to the effectiveness of indoor and therapeutic anti-malarial interventions, such as insecticide-treated nets (ITNs), indoor residual spraying for mosquitoes (IRS), artemisinin-combination therapy (ACT), and intermittent presumptive treatment (IPT). The decline of malaria in subSaharan Africa is generally attributed to anti-malarial interventions including the distribution of insecticidetreated nets (ITNs), artemisinin-combination therapy (ACT), intermittent presumptive treatment (IPT, [7]), and indoor residual spraying for mosquitoes (IRS), these cannot account for all observed reductions in malaria incidence [2]. An entomologic study by Meyrowitsch et al [9] of two rural communities in the nearby Tanga region of Tanzania indicated that these declines are most likely due to declines in the abundance of Anopheles gambiae and Anopheles funestus mosquitoes, which they in turn attributed to declining precipitation and interruptions in annual (periodic) rainfall patterns [9]. These studies indicate that changes in climate and consequent weather patterns may be responsible for declines in African malaria, at least in some regions [9]

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