Research  Dangerous airborne fungus boosted by California droughts

#1
C C Offline
https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1056292

INTRO: Valley fever is an emerging fungal disease in the western United States that most often causes flu-like symptoms, but can also cause dangerous or even deadly complications. By analyzing data on reported cases of Valley fever in California, which have increased dramatically over the last two decades, researchers from University of California San Diego and University of California, Berkeley, have identified seasonal patterns that could help individuals and public health officials better prepare for future surges in Valley fever cases.

The findings also have important implications for how the changing climate can exacerbate the threat of infectious diseases. The findings are published in The Lancet Regional Health - Americas.

The researchers collaborated closely with the California Department of Health (CDPH) to analyze all reported Valley fever cases in California from 2000 to 2021. By comparing these to seasonal climate data, they discovered how the disease cycles seasonally across different California counties and identified how these cycles are influenced by drought periods. The researchers found that while most cases occur during the period from September to November, there were differences in seasonal patterns and timing between counties and years.

“Most seasonal infectious diseases show a peak in cases every year, so we were surprised to see that there were certain years during which few or no counties had a seasonal peak in Valley fever cases,” said first author Alexandra Heaney, Ph.D., assistant professor at the UC San Diego Herbert Wertheim School of Public Health and Human Longevity Science. “This made us wonder what was driving these differences in seasonality between years, and based on the timing we observed, we hypothesized that drought might be playing a role.”

The researchers found that on average, counties in the San Joaquin Valley and Central Coast regions had the most pronounced seasonal peaks, though the peaks started earlier in San Joaquin Valley.

“This is valuable information to time public health messaging aimed at educating the public about the symptoms of Valley fever and how to protect themselves,” added Heaney.

Valley fever is caused by spores from the soil-dwelling Coccidioides fungus. People contract Valley fever by inhaling infectious spores that become aerosolized when the soil is disturbed by wind or human activity. Valley fever is most likely to affect people who are exposed to airborne dust frequently, including those who work outdoors. However, the disease is not contagious.

Valley fever has long been a problem in the American Southwest, but the number of cases has skyrocketed in recent years... (MORE - details)
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#2
Yazata Offline
Valley fever has been around forever here in California. I remember hearing about it in college (so long ago we did assignments on cuneiform tablets).

Part of the problem is that the state's water system was largely completed in the 1960's when California had half the population that it has today. So as the population exploded to almost 40 million (it's been going down slightly recently) places like LA took more and more water from limited reservoirs that previously went to farmers in the central valley. Meanwhile California became a one-party state where environmentalists have far more power than they used to.

California could build more dams and reservoirs, capture more runoff from the Sierra snowpack, but the environmentalists would never allow it. The mountain rivers must remain pristine and the water must be allowed to flow to the sea to protect all the endangered species.

So farms dry up and what used to be green fields of crops turn to dust...
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