Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Courtin Fabrice, Sidibé I., Rouamba J., Jamonneau Vincent, Gouro A., Solano Philippe. (2009). Impacts des évolutions démographiques et climatiques sur la répartition spatiale des hommes, des tsé-tsé et des trypanosomoses en Afrique de l'Ouest = Population growth and global warming : impacts on tsetse and tryponosomoses in West Africa. Parasite - Journal de la Société Française de Parasitologie, 16 (1), p. 3-10. ISSN 1252-607X.

Titre du document
Impacts des évolutions démographiques et climatiques sur la répartition spatiale des hommes, des tsé-tsé et des trypanosomoses en Afrique de l'Ouest = Population growth and global warming : impacts on tsetse and tryponosomoses in West Africa
Année de publication
2009
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000264469700001
Auteurs
Courtin Fabrice, Sidibé I., Rouamba J., Jamonneau Vincent, Gouro A., Solano Philippe
Source
Parasite - Journal de la Société Française de Parasitologie, 2009, 16 (1), p. 3-10 ISSN 1252-607X
Demographic evolution, climatic change and economical development that happened in West Africa during the XXth century had a lot of consequences on human settlement and landscape. These changes have in turn an impact on the pathogenic system of human and animal tryponosomoses. Since lost century, the northern tsetse distribution limit has shifted towards the south, probably due to a decrease in rainfall combined to the impact of human pressure. Sleeping sickness (SS) foci have also shifted from the savannah areas (where there is no more SS) to the forest and mangrove areas of West Africa, but animal tryponosomoses are still present in savannah. We show a decrease of tsetse of the morsitans group as a result of an increase of human densities. On the opposite, tsetse species like Glossina palpalis adopt to high human densities and are found in the biggest urban centres of West Africa. There is a need to promote multidisciplinary studies on this demographic-climatic-vector borne disease topic, especially in Africa to be able to define future areas of presence/absence of these diseases in order to help continental plans of control that hove recently begun.
Plan de classement
Entomologie médicale / Parasitologie / Virologie [052]
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010044381]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010044381
Contact