| Literature DB >> 27716414 |
Ángel G Muñoz1,2,3, Madeleine C Thomson2,4,5, Lisa Goddard2, Sylvain Aldighieri6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The emergence of Zika virus (ZIKV) in Latin America and the Caribbean in 2014-2016 occurred during a period of severe drought and unusually high temperatures, conditions that have been associated with the 2015-2016 El Niño event, and/or climate change; however, no quantitative assessment has been made to date. Analysis of related flaviviruses transmitted by the same vectors suggests that ZIKV dynamics are sensitive to climate seasonality and longer-term variability and trends. A better understanding of the climate conditions conducive to the 2014-2016 epidemic may permit the development of climate-informed short and long-term strategies for ZIKV prevention and control.Entities:
Keywords: Brazil; Climate; Climate change; Decadal; Drought; El Niño; Epidemic; Inter-annual; Vector control; Zika virus
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27716414 PMCID: PMC5053076 DOI: 10.1186/s13742-016-0146-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gigascience ISSN: 2047-217X Impact factor: 6.524
Fig. 1Timescale decomposition for annual precipitation (a–c) and air temperature (d–f), sketching the total explained variance for the long-term trend (a, d), decadal (b, e) and inter-annual variability (c, f) signals. Grid points in white indicate places where the lack of data would degrade the analysis, thus the corresponding signal has been removed by the screening process [15]. Analysis focuses in the region delimited by the black box (see main text)
Fig. 2Timescale decomposition for annual anomalies in the 1901–2014 period (black curves represent rainfall in the top panel, and temperature in the bottom panel) averaged over the region indicated in Fig. 1 (black box). The anomalies correspond to the superposition of the long-term trend (red), the decadal signal (green) and the inter-annual variability signal (blue). Contribution of each timescale to the total explained variance is shown in parentheses
Fig. 3Annual rainfall (upper row, in mm) and temperature anomalies (bottom row, in °C) in Latin America and the Carribbean for 2013–2015. White over land indicates near-normal values. Black box corresponds to region with the highest number of reported Zika cases (see main text)