Abstract

Forecasting the impacts of climate change on Aedes-borne viruses—especially dengue, chikungunya, and Zika—is a key component of public health preparedness. We apply an empirically parameterized model of viral transmission by the vectors Aedes aegypti and Ae. albopictus, as a function of temperature, to predict cumulative monthly global transmission risk in current climates, and compare them with projected risk in 2050 and 2080 based on general circulation models (GCMs). Our results show that if mosquito range shifts track optimal temperature ranges for transmission (21.3–34.0°C for Ae. aegypti; 19.9–29.4°C for Ae. albopictus), we can expect poleward shifts in Aedes-borne virus distributions. However, the differing thermal niches of the two vectors produce different patterns of shifts under climate change. More severe climate change scenarios produce larger population exposures to transmission by Ae. aegypti, but not by Ae. albopictus in the most extreme cases. Climate-driven risk of transmission from both mosquitoes will increase substantially, even in the short term, for most of Europe. In contrast, significant reductions in climate suitability are expected for Ae. albopictus, most noticeably in southeast Asia and west Africa. Within the next century, nearly a billion people are threatened with new exposure to virus transmission by both Aedes spp. in the worst-case scenario. As major net losses in year-round transmission risk are predicted for Ae. albopictus, we project a global shift towards more seasonal risk across regions. Many other complicating factors (like mosquito range limits and viral evolution) exist, but overall our results indicate that while climate change will lead to increased net and new exposures to Aedes-borne viruses, the most extreme increases in Ae. albopictus transmission are predicted to occur at intermediate climate change scenarios.

Highlights

  • Climate change will have a profound effect on the global distribution and burden of infectious diseases [1,2,3]

  • While year-round transmission potential from Ae. aegypti is likely to expand, Ae. albopictus transmission potential is likely to decline substantially in the tropics, marking a global shift towards seasonal risk as the tropics eventually become too hot for transmission by Ae. albopictus

  • Complete mitigation of climate change to a pre-industrial baseline may protect almost a billion people from arbovirus range expansions; middle-of-theroad mitigation could produce the greatest expansion in the potential for viral transmission by Ae. albopictus

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Summary

Introduction

Climate change will have a profound effect on the global distribution and burden of infectious diseases [1,2,3]. Current knowledge suggests that the range of mosquito-borne diseases could expand dramatically in response to climate change [4,5]. Forecasting the potential impacts of climate change on Aedesborne viruses—which include widespread threats like dengue and yellow fever, as well as several emerging threats like chikungunya, Zika, West Nile, and Japanese encephalitis— becomes a key problem for public health preparedness [4,9,10]. We compare the impact of climate change on transmission by two vectors, Aedes aegypti and Ae. albopictus

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