Climate change linked to vampire bat expansion and rabies virus spillover

Author:

Van de Vuurst Paige12ORCID,Qiao Huijie3ORCID,Soler‐Tovar Diego4ORCID,Escobar Luis E.2456ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Virginia Tech Graduate School, Translational Biology, Medicine, and Health Program Blacksburg VA USA

2. Department of Fish and Wildlife Conservation, Virginia Tech Blacksburg VA USA

3. Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

4. Facultad de Ciencias Agropecuarias, Universidad de La Salle Bogotá Colombia

5. Global Change Center, Virginia Tech Blacksburg VA USA

6. Center for Emerging Zoonotic and Arthropod‐borne Pathogens, Virginia Tech Blacksburg VA USA

Abstract

Bat‐borne pathogens are a threat to global health and in recent history have had major impacts on human morbidity and mortality. Examples include diseases such as rabies, Nipah virus encephalitis, and severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS). Climate change may exacerbate the emergence of bat‐borne pathogens by affecting the ecology of bats in tropical ecosystems. Here, we report the impacts of climate change on the distributional ecology of the common vampire bat Desmodus rotundus across the last century. Our retrospective analysis revealed a positive relationship between changes in climate and the northern expansion of the distribution of D. rotundus in North America. Furthermore, we also found a reduction in the standard deviation of temperatures at D. rotundus capture locations during the last century, expressed as more consistent, less‐seasonal climate in recent years. These results elucidate an association between D. rotundus range expansion and a continental‐level rise in rabies virus spillover transmission from D. rotundus to cattle in the last 50 years of the 120‐year study period. This correlative study, based on field observations, offers empirical evidence supporting previous statistical and mathematical simulation‐based studies reporting a likely increase of bat‐borne diseases in response to climate change. We conclude that the D. rotundus rabies system exemplifies the consequences of climate change augmentation at the wildlife–livestock–human interface, demonstrating how global change acts upon these complex and interconnected systems to drive increased disease emergence.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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