Abstract

BackgroundAlthough the linkage between climate change and plague transmission has been proposed in previous studies, the dominant approach has been to address the linkage with traditional statistical methods, while the possible non-linearity, non-stationarity and low frequency domain of the linkage has not been fully considered. We seek to address the above issue by investigating plague transmission in pre-industrial Europe (AD1347–1760) at both continental and country levels.MethodsWe apply Granger Causality Analysis to identify the casual relationship between climatic variables and plague outbreaks. We then apply Wavelet Analysis to explore the non-linear and non-stationary association between climate change and plague outbreaks.ResultsOur results show that 5-year lagged temperature and aridity index are the significant determinants of plague outbreaks in pre-industrial Europe. At the multi-decadal time scale, there are more frequent plague outbreaks in a cold and arid climate. The synergy of temperature and aridity index, rather than their individual effect, is more imperative in driving plague outbreaks, which is valid at both the continental and country levels.ConclusionsPlague outbreaks come after cold and dry spells. The multi-decadal climate variability is imperative in driving the cycles of plague outbreaks in pre-industrial Europe. The lagged and multi-decadal effect of climate change on plague outbreaks may be attributable to the complexity of ecological, social, or climate systems, through which climate exerts its influence on plague dynamics. These findings may contribute to improve our understanding of the epidemiology of plague and other rodent-borne or flea-borne infectious diseases in human history.

Highlights

  • The linkage between climate change and plague transmission has been proposed in previous studies, the dominant approach has been to address the linkage with traditional statistical methods, while the possible non-linearity, non-stationarity and low frequency domain of the linkage has not been fully considered

  • Climate-plague nexus in pre-industrial Europe in general Based on the result of Augmented Dickey-Fuller test (ADF) test, zero differencing should be carried out for the dataset tested in Granger Causality Analysis (GCA) (Additional file 1: Table S1)

  • The Akaike’s Information Criterion (AIC) lag indicates that plague outbreaks lag behind the change of temperature and aridity index for five years

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Summary

Introduction

As it is nearly impossible to design laboratory experiments to study plague transmission in human societies, plague transmission has been mainly examined using a retrospective approach [15, 16]. Under this approach, scholars employ historical records to reveal the major longitudinal change of plague frequency and reflect the characteristics of the plagueenvironment relationship. Given the complexity of plague transmission, the influence of climatic forcing on plague transmission is unlikely to be linear and stationary

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