Summer may mean it’s time for outdoor fun in the sun, but it’s also prime time for a number of pests. All that extra time outdoors can bring everything from poison ivy rashes to exposure to Lyme disease from tick bites. And of course there’s that ubiquitous summer menace, the mosquito.
With the rising temperatures brought about by global warming, the risks posed by these pernicious pests could also be increasing. A warmer climate can mean expanded habitats for many pest species, as well as increases in their numbers. Here’s what research suggests will happen with four key summertime pests as the world warms:
Mosquitoesrisk of spreading diseases like malaria, West Nile virus and dengue fever, including the invasive , which first appeared in the U.S. in 1985.
Predicted change in the range of the Asian Tiger mosquito with warming from high levels of greenhouse gas emissions. Rochlin et al./PLOS ONEAs temperatures around the country rise, the areas that are conducive to such mosquitoes could expand, and the insects could start to emerge earlier in the year, meaning more opportunities for bites that . After an unseasonably warm late spring, summer, and early winter in 2012, the U.S. experienced a outbreak linked to the Asian Tiger mosquito, with some 5,600 people becoming infected.
One key question in terms of the health impact of expanded mosquito territory is whether the new climates they venture into will be as welcoming to the pathogens they can carry. Arizona has a lot of , another invasive mosquito species, but no dengue, which it can often carry, , a scientist with the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colo., said. Why this is isn’t known, but Hayden and her colleagues suspect it is because the harsh desert climate doesn’t allow the mosquitoes to live long enough for dengue to undergo its full development cycle.
But there have been small outbreaks of dengue in Texas near the Mexican border, Hayden said, as well as a disease found in the Caribbean, called , in Florida. Health officials are closely watching these areas for larger outbreaks, she said.
is a well-known scourge for those who spend time outdoors in the summer. Already more than 350,000 cases of poison ivy occur annually in the U.S., according to , and that number could go up as the climate changes.
Those oils, which put the “poison” in poison ivy, can vary in their chemical structure, and also cause the plants to produce a more toxic form, “so climate change is not doing us any favors there,” Inkley said.
Deer Ticksdeer tick, to transmit diseases such as and .
The that about 300,000 people in the U.S. are diagnosed with Lyme disease each year, primarily in the Midwest and Northeast. (While ticks are found throughout the South, they have a more diverse array of species to feed on there, and so are less likely to encounter the deer and mice that can harbor Lyme disease.)
As temperatures rise, there is concern that into newly suitable habitat and bring Lyme disease and other pathogens with them. They have already expanded northward into Canada, where the number of reported cases of Lyme disease doubled between 2009 and 2012, according to — a trend attributed to more locally acquired cases.
That northward expansion is expected to continue, as shown in the , while a much smaller retraction on the southern end of their range is also anticipated. The worry is that people who aren’t used to having to think about Lyme exposure won’t know to take proper precautions to reduce their risks.
Expected range of deer ticks with warming by 2080. NCARed Fire Antsimported red fire ant, as it is colloquially known, came to the U.S. from its native South America sometime in the 1930s or ‘40s, likely as a stowaway in ship ballast. now covers more than 300 million acres, mostly in the Southeast, where it came ashore, according to the NWF.
With warming, those low temperatures don’t get as cold, meaning colonies could be less inhibited. Morrison did a that modeled the of the imported red fire ant with climate change and found that warming temperatures would expand suitable habitats by about 5 percent by mid-century and then by 21 percent towards the end of the century. This would mean imported red fire ants could be found as far north as Nebraska, Kentucky and Maryland.
Possible expanded range of the imported red fire ant with climate change. L.W. Morrison et al. Warming May Boost Wind Energy in Plains StatesFossil Fuels May Bring Major Changes to Carbon DatingRain, Storm Surge Combine to Put U.S. Coasts at RiskGAO Report Sees Climate Risks to Army Corps ProjectsClimate Central. The article was
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