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Climate change and impact on emerging infectious diseases: Plague as an example 
 
Tue, Jan 19, 2016,   04:00 PM at CV Raman Auditorium

Prof. Nils Christian-Stenseth
Chair and Research Professor, Centre for Ecological and Evolutionary Synthesis, Oslo, Norway

The Medieval pandemic is generally understood to be the consequence of a singular introduction of the plague bacterium from Asia into Europe via the trade routes of the ancient Silk Road, after which the disease was assumed to have established itself in European rodents, especially urban rats, and from there spilled over and caused outbreaks in humans until the bacterium disappeared from Europe in the early 19th century. However, new research suggests that the bacterium was repeatedly reimported into Europe from Central Asia along the Silk Road, with climate fluctuations being the driving force of these pandemics. What can we learn from past outbreaks and how can we prepare for new pandemics? Could our current climate change increase the risk of plague outbreaks where plague is currently endemic and cause new plague areas to arise? 

About the speaker: Nils Chr. Stenseth is Chair and Research Professor of CEES - Centre for Ecological and Evolutionary Synthesis – in Olso, Norway. In addition, he is a Chief Scientist at the Institute of Marine Research, Bergen, Norway. His research interests span a broad spectrum of ecological and evolutionary topics, most of which are rooted in population biology. He is an elected member of The Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters (DNVA); he was the vice-president/president of that Academy 2009-2014. He is also an elected member/fellow of several other academies, including the National Academy of Sciences (Washington, US), Academia Europaea, French Académie des Sciences, Finnish Society of Sciences and Letters, the Royal Norwegian Society of Science and Letters and Agder Academy of Science and Letters. He is the president of the International Biological Union (IUBS) as well as member of the Scientific Council of the European Research Council (ERC). Additionally, he is Editor-in-Chief of Climate Research.

For more information: 

Nils Christian Stenseth

BBC.com - 'Gerbils replace rats' as main cause of Black Death

TheGuardian.com - Not black rats but great gerbils were chief cause of the great plague, study says

ScienceNordic.com - The Black Death came to Europe at different times

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