top of page

Deforestation is causing an increase in malaria cases

  • csrice8
  • May 22, 2017
  • 1 min read

Nearly 130 million hectares of forest—an area almost equivalent in size to South Africa—have been lost since 1990, according to a recent report by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. A new study of 67 less-developed, malaria-endemic nations titled, "Anthropogenic forest loss and malaria prevalence: a comparative examination of the causes and disease consequences of deforestation in developing nations," published in AIMS Environmental Science, led by Lehigh University sociologist Dr. Kelly Austin, finds a link between deforestation and increasing malaria rates across developing nations.

Malaria represents an infectious disease tied to environmental conditions, as mosquitoes represent the disease vector. Deforestation, Austin notes, is not a natural phenomenon, but rather results predominantly from human activities, or anthropogenically.

CIFOR

 
 
 

Comments


Like what you read? Donate now and help DRP implement more projects that help communities adapt to the effects of climate change.

Donate with PayPal

© 2017 by Developing Radio Partners.

bottom of page