Abstract

We hypothesized that Cholera (Vibrio cholerae) that appeared along Lake Kivu in the African Rift in the seventies, might be controlled by volcano-tectonic activity, which, by increasing surface water and groundwater salinity and temperature, may partly rule the water characteristics of Lake Kivu and promote V. cholerae proliferation. Volcanic activity (assessed weekly by the SO2 flux of Nyiragongo volcano plume over the 2007–2012 period) is highly positively correlated with the water conductivity, salinity and temperature of the Kivu lake. Over the 2007–2012 period, these three parameters were highly positively correlated with the temporal dynamics of cholera cases in the Katana health zone that border the lake. Meteorological variables (air temperature and rainfall), and the other water characteristics (namely pH and dissolved oxygen concentration in lake water) were unrelated to cholera dynamics over the same period. Over the 2016–2018 period, we sampled weekly lake water salinity and conductivity, and twice a month vibrio occurrence in lake water and fish. The abundance of V. cholerae in the lake was positively correlated with lake salinity, temperature, and the number of cholera cases in the population of the Katana health zone. V. cholerae abundance in fishes was positively correlated with V. cholerae abundance in lake water, suggesting that their consumption directly contaminate humans. The activity of the volcano, by controlling the physico-chemical characteristics of Lake Kivu, is therefore a major determinant of the presence of the bacillus in the lake. SO2 fluxes in the volcano plume can be used as a tool to predict epidemic risks.

Highlights

  • Cholera is a severe infectious disease caused by Vibrio cholerae

  • We focused on the Katana health zone, bordering Lake Kivu, as during outbreaks, this is, the health zone in which the first cases of Cholera are usually observed, and the highest number of cases are usually reached in this area

  • Cholera is a serious public health problem in the health zones located along the Rift in general and more in the Katana health zone

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Summary

Introduction

Cholera is a severe infectious disease caused by Vibrio cholerae. This bacillus thrives in alkaline saline aquatic environments with high temperatures and rich in organic matter and plankton [1,2,3,4,5,6]. The disease was introduced to continental Africa in 1970, during the seventh pandemic It became endemic far from coastal areas, in the Lake Chad basin and the Great Lakes region [14,15,16]. The Great Lakes are highly suspected of being reservoirs for the cholera bacillus, while human infection and movement are considered to propagate the disease inland [17]. A significant role of meteorology has been found, with rainfall increasing the number of cholera cases, e.g., in Kivu province, but without excluding the role of population movements [20]

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