The Prague Post - Climate change may boost Arctic 'virus spillover' risk

EUR -
AED 4.247724
AFN 81.382259
ALL 97.942545
AMD 443.939575
ANG 2.069889
AOA 1060.608591
ARS 1367.349581
AUD 1.768944
AWG 2.084783
AZN 1.97823
BAM 1.954653
BBD 2.334431
BDT 141.397053
BGN 1.955837
BHD 0.436231
BIF 3442.580502
BMD 1.156607
BND 1.481031
BOB 8.018296
BRL 6.346644
BSD 1.156122
BTN 99.659537
BWP 15.456933
BYN 3.78368
BYR 22669.487548
BZD 2.322338
CAD 1.568549
CDF 3327.556712
CHF 0.940201
CLF 0.028179
CLP 1081.346391
CNY 8.304146
CNH 8.309454
COP 4747.719355
CRC 582.258434
CUC 1.156607
CUP 30.650072
CVE 110.201306
CZK 24.7988
DJF 205.879226
DKK 7.458736
DOP 68.359898
DZD 150.273274
EGP 57.996557
ERN 17.349098
ETB 155.258122
FJD 2.589872
FKP 0.850588
GBP 0.852425
GEL 3.151722
GGP 0.850588
GHS 11.908014
GIP 0.850588
GMD 82.685314
GNF 10017.123721
GTQ 8.879791
GYD 241.798156
HKD 9.078945
HNL 30.188291
HRK 7.537023
HTG 151.311237
HUF 402.722866
IDR 18849.678896
ILS 4.049627
IMP 0.850588
INR 99.753886
IQD 1514.611493
IRR 48704.699992
ISK 143.580963
JEP 0.850588
JMD 184.012054
JOD 0.820009
JPY 167.329158
KES 149.583773
KGS 101.144807
KHR 4630.283767
KMF 492.148277
KPW 1040.951798
KRW 1579.109081
KWD 0.354025
KYD 0.963535
KZT 599.848115
LAK 24943.367637
LBP 103591.830608
LKR 347.716022
LRD 231.234353
LSL 20.623702
LTL 3.415159
LVL 0.69962
LYD 6.27332
MAD 10.53512
MDL 19.747416
MGA 5191.954278
MKD 61.506202
MMK 2427.662513
MNT 4143.505213
MOP 9.348137
MRU 45.644224
MUR 52.521731
MVR 17.817545
MWK 2004.823923
MXN 21.895637
MYR 4.910374
MZN 73.965295
NAD 20.623702
NGN 1788.552951
NIO 42.545042
NOK 11.417591
NPR 159.45546
NZD 1.90391
OMR 0.444707
PAB 1.156122
PEN 4.165656
PGK 4.760208
PHP 65.685992
PKR 327.597724
PLN 4.276015
PYG 9235.582191
QAR 4.217126
RON 5.027795
RSD 117.213988
RUB 90.68071
RWF 1669.52062
SAR 4.339437
SBD 9.654647
SCR 16.972783
SDG 694.541519
SEK 10.946465
SGD 1.481509
SHP 0.908911
SLE 25.705549
SLL 24253.464398
SOS 660.712411
SRD 44.808109
STD 23939.419527
SVC 10.116066
SYP 15038.078425
SZL 20.618904
THB 37.60417
TJS 11.451782
TMT 4.048123
TND 3.417095
TOP 2.708891
TRY 45.554966
TTD 7.849395
TWD 34.117569
TZS 3006.230857
UAH 48.039035
UGX 4156.561664
USD 1.156607
UYU 47.502545
UZS 14700.376415
VES 118.167034
VND 30166.032627
VUV 138.693648
WST 3.182725
XAF 655.572426
XAG 0.031252
XAU 0.000342
XCD 3.125787
XDR 0.818022
XOF 655.578091
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.997676
ZAR 20.605546
ZMK 10410.848583
ZMW 28.146489
ZWL 372.426824
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Climate change may boost Arctic 'virus spillover' risk
Climate change may boost Arctic 'virus spillover' risk / Photo: Graham COLBY - Graham COLBY/AFP

Climate change may boost Arctic 'virus spillover' risk

A warming climate could bring viruses in the Arctic into contact with new environments and hosts, increasing the risk of "viral spillover", according to research published Wednesday.

Text size:

Viruses need hosts like humans, animals, plants or fungi to replicate and spread, and occasionally they can jump to a new one that lacks immunity, as seen during the Covid-19 pandemic.

Scientists in Canada wanted to investigate how climate change might affect spillover risk by examining samples from the Arctic landscape of Lake Hazen.

It is the largest lake in the world entirely north of the Arctic Circle, and "was truly unlike any other place I've been", researcher Graham Colby, now a medical student at University of Toronto, told AFP.

The team sampled soil that becomes a riverbed for melted glacier water in the summer, as well as the lakebed itself -- which required clearing snow and drilling through two metres of ice, even in May when the research was carried out.

They used ropes and a snowmobile to lift the lake sediment through almost 300 metres (980 feet) of water, and samples were then sequenced for DNA and RNA, the genetic blueprints and messengers of life.

"This enabled us to know what viruses are in a given environment, and what potential hosts are also present," said Stephane Aris-Brosou, an associate professor in the University of Ottawa's biology department, who led the work.

But to find out how likely they were to jump hosts, the team needed to examine the equivalent of each virus and host's family tree.

"Basically what we tried to do is measure how similar these trees are," said Audree Lemieux, first author of the research.

Similar genealogies suggest a virus has evolved along with its host, but differences suggest spillover.

And if a virus has jumped hosts once, it is more likely to do so again.

- 'Very unpredictable' -

The analysis found pronounced differences between viruses and hosts in the lakebed, "which is directly correlated to the risk of spillover," said Aris-Brosou.

The difference was less stark in the riverbeds, which the researchers theorise is because water erodes the topsoil, removing organisms and limiting interactions between viruses and potential new hosts.

Those instead wash into the lake, which has seen "dramatic change" in recent years, the study says, as increased water from melting glaciers deposits more sediment.

"That's going to bring together hosts and viruses that would not normally encounter each other," Lemieux said.

The authors of the research, published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences journal, caution they are neither forecasting an actual spillover nor a pandemic.

"The likelihood of dramatic events remains very low," Lemieux said.

They also warn more work is needed to clarify how big the difference between viruses and hosts needs to be to create serious spillover risk.

But they argue that warming weather could increase risks further if new potential hosts move into previously inhospitable regions.

"It could be anything from ticks to mosquitoes to certain animals, to bacteria and viruses themselves," said Lemieux.

"It's really unpredictable... and the effect of spillover itself is very unpredictable, it can range from benign to an actual pandemic."

The team wants more research and surveillance work in the region to understand the risks.

"Obviously we've seen in the past two years what the effects of spillover can be," said Lemieux.

E.Cerny--TPP