Counting the heat health threat from climate change
Unexpected Elements
BBC
4.4 • 570 Ratings
🗓️ 9 August 2020
⏱️ 61 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
If the world does not curb its greenhouse gas emissions, by the end of this century, the number of people dying annually because of extreme heat will be greater than the current global death toll from infectious diseases - that’s all infectiousness diseases, from malaria to diarrhoeal diseases to HIV. This is the grim assessment of climate researchers and economists of the Climate Impact Lab in the largest global study to date of health and financial impacts of temperature-related deaths. Roland Pease talks to Solomon Hsiang of the University of California, Berkeley.
UK ecologists have new insights about how diseases jump the species barrier from wildlife to humans. With a global survey of land use and biodiversity, they’ve discovered that when natural habitats are converted to farmland or urbanised, the animal species that survive the change in greatest number are those species which carry viruses and bacteria with the potential to spread to us. This is particularly the case, says Rory Gibb of the University College London, with disease-carrying rodent species, bats and birds.
Do past infections by mild cold coronaviruses prepare the immune systems of some people for infection by SARS-CoV-2? Could immune memory T cells made in response to these cold viruses lessen the severity of Covid-19? Alessandro Sette and Daniela Weiskopf of the La Jolla Institute for Immunology lead the team which published the latest contributions to these questions.
Anglerfish are perhaps the weirdest inhabitants of the deep sea. Their sex lives are particularly strange because finding partners in the dark expanse of the ocean abyss is hard. Females are much bigger than males. When a male finds a female, he latches on her body with his teeth and over a couple of weeks, their flesh fuses so he is permanently attached. Her blood supplies him with all the food and oxygen he needs and he becomes an ever present supply of sperm whenever she produces eggs. But this fusion should be impossible. The female’s immune system should be rejecting her partner like a mismatched organ transplant. German scientists have now discovered that these fish do this by giving up the production of antibodies and immune T cells – essential for fighting infections in all other animals including us. It was a shocking discovery for Prof Thomas Boehm at the Max Planck Institute in Freiburg.
Anyone else had their flight cancelled? The COVID 19 pandemic has had a huge impact on air travel – air traffic in 2020 is expected to be down 50 per cent on last year. But beyond the obvious disruption to business and people’s lives, how might the quieter skies affect our weather and climate?
One curious listener, Jeroen Wijnands, who lives next to Schiphol airport in the Netherlands, noticed how there were fewer clouds and barely any rainfall since the flights dropped off. Could airplanes affect our local weather?
Also, did we learn anything from another occasion when airplanes were grounded, during the post-9/11 shutdown? How will the current period impact our future climate?
Marnie Chesterton investigates this question and discovers some of the surprising effects that grounded aircraft are having: on cloud formation, forecasting and climate change.
(Image: Relatives of heatstroke victims, their heads covered with wet towels, wait outside a hospital during a heatwave in Karachi. .Credit: Rizwan Tabassum/AFP via Getty Images)
Transcript
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| 0:29.5 | Listen first on BBC Sounds. Thank you for downloading the Science Hour from the BBC World Service. |
| 0:36.0 | I'm Roland Peace. And since the pandemic lockdown started, |
| 0:39.7 | I've been rather enjoying the sound of open skies. Yes, there's not a lot. A little bird song? |
| 0:51.0 | That's lovely. But thanks to coronavirus, flights are down by around 50%. |
| 0:56.5 | Listener Jerune, who lives next to Shiphole Airport near Amsterdam, has noticed not just the silence, but also clearer skies. |
| 1:04.9 | Has the lockdown affected the weather, he wonders? |
| 1:08.2 | Marnie Chesterton has been out looking for the answers for crowd science, |
| 1:12.2 | which you can hear later in the podcast. We're also looking into the changing weather on |
| 1:17.2 | science in action before that. In particular, the health effects of increasing heat waves due to global |
| 1:23.4 | warming. And we've a little dangerous sex too. Anglerfish take perfect union one stage |
| 1:30.3 | beyond, actually fusing their bodies. But it seems that that is rather risky. The mere fact that two |
| 1:37.3 | individuals can fuse their bodies and stay together for almost indefinite times, of course, raises a lot of questions. |
| 1:46.8 | As an immunologist, you look at these fish, you scratch your head, how is that possible? |
| 1:50.9 | Stay with us to find out. We're also finding out how forest clearance multiplies the risks of us |
| 1:56.6 | catching animal diseases, like the coronavirus that's currently spreading globally. |
| 2:01.6 | As you move towards more human disturbed landscapes, where those species that we know host human |
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