Abstract

Malaria occurrence is highly related to the geographical distribution of Anopheles dirus (An. dirus) in the South-East Asia Region and Western Pacific Region (SEAR/WPR). Future climate change has been shown to alter the geographical distribution of malaria vectors. However, few studies have investigated the impact of climate change on the potential distribution of An. dirus in the SEAR/WPR. We considered future climate and land-use data under two climate change scenarios for Representative Concentration Pathways (RCP 4.5 and RCP 8.5) and population data from five Shared Socioeconomic Pathways (SSPs), by using three machine learning models, namely, Random Forest (RF), Boosted Regression Trees (BRT), and Maximum entropy (Maxent) to project the geographical distribution of An. Dirus and to estimate the exposed population. A pseudo-absence dataset was generated based on the relationships between model performance and the distance from the pseudo-absence point to the occurrence point in order to improve model accuracy for projection of the Environmentally Suitable Area (ESA) and exposed human population. The results show that the pseudo-absence data corresponding to the distance of 250 km are appropriate for modeling. The RF method ultimately proved to have the highest accuracy. The predicted ESA of An. dirus would mainly be distributed across Myanmar, Thailand, the southern and eastern part of India, Vietnam, the northern part of Cambodia, and the southern part of Laos. The future ESA is estimated to be reduced under the RCP 4.5 climate change scenario. In the 2070s under RCP 8.5, the reduction of ESA is even greater, especially in Thailand (loss of 35.49 10,000 square kilometers), Myanmar (26.24), Vietnam (17.52), and India (15), which may prevent around 282.6 million people from the risk of malaria under the SSP3 scenarios in the SEAR/WPR. Our predicted areas and potential impact groups for An. dirus under future climate change may provide new insights into regional malaria transmission mechanisms and deployment of malaria control measures based on local conditions in the SEAR/WPR’s.

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