Climate change, allergy and asthma, and the role of tropical forests

被引:29
|
作者
D'Amato, Gennaro [1 ,2 ]
Vitale, Carolina [3 ]
Rosario, Nelson [4 ]
Chong Neto, Herberto Jose [4 ]
Chong-Silva, Deborah Carla [4 ]
Mendonca, Francisco [4 ]
Perini, Jose [5 ]
Landgraf, Loraine [6 ]
Sole, Dirceu [7 ]
Sanchez-Borges, Mario [8 ,9 ]
Ansotegui, Ignacio [10 ]
D'Amato, Maria [11 ,12 ]
机构
[1] High Specialty Hosp A Cardarelli, Div Resp & Allerg Dis, Dept Resp Dis, Naples, Italy
[2] Univ Naples Federico II, Sch Specializat Resp Dis, Naples, Italy
[3] Univ Salerno, Dept Med & Surg, Salerno, Italy
[4] Univ Fed Parana, Curitiba, Parana, Brazil
[5] ASBAI Brazilian Assoc Allergy, Curitiba, Parana, Brazil
[6] Parana ASBAI, Curitiba, Parana, Brazil
[7] Univ Fed Sao Paulo, Escola Paulista Med, Dept Pediat, Sao Paulo, Brazil
[8] Ctr Med Docente La Trinidad, Allergy & Clin Immunol Dept, Caracas, Venezuela
[9] Clin El Avila, Caracas, Venezuela
[10] Hosp Quirin Bizkaia, Dept Allergy & Immunol, Carretera Leioa Unbe 33 Bis, Erandio 48950, Spain
[11] High Special Hosp V Monaldi, Div Pneumol 1, Naples, Italy
[12] Univ Federico II, Sch Med, Naples, Italy
来源
关键词
Respiratory allergy; Bronchial asthma; Climate change; Air pollution and respiratory diseases; Greenhouse gas emissions; Anthropogenic emissions of CO2; Interaction between climate change and allergy; Deforestation and climate change; THUNDERSTORM-RELATED ASTHMA; AIR-POLLUTION; CO2; EMISSIONS; DEFORESTATION; POLLEN; FUTURE; AMAZON; OZONE; PARTICLES; CHILDREN;
D O I
10.1186/s40413-017-0142-7
中图分类号
R392 [医学免疫学];
学科分类号
100102 ;
摘要
Background: Tropical forests cover less than 10 per cent of all land area (1.8 x 107 km(2)) and over half of the tropical-forest area (1.1 x 107 Km(2)) is represented by humid tropical forests (also called tropical rainforests). The Amazon basin contains the largest rainforest on Earth, almost 5.8 million km(2), and occupies about 40% of South America; more than 60% of the basin is located in Brazil and the rest in Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, French Guiana, Guyana, Peru, Suriname and Venezuela. Over the past decade the positive role of tropical rainforests in capturing large amounts of atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) has been demonstrated. In response to the increase in atmospheric CO2 concentration, tropical forests act as a global carbon sink. Main body: Accumulation of carbon in the tropical terrestrial biosphere strongly contributes to slowing the rate of increase of CO2 into the atmosphere, thus resulting in the reduction of greenhouse gas effect. Tropical rainforests have been estimated to account for 32-36% of terrestrial Net Primary Productivity (NPP) that is the difference between total forest photosynthesis and plant respiration. Tropical rainforests have been acting as a strong carbon sink in this way for decades. However, over the past years, increased concentrations of greenhouse gases, and especially CO2, in the atmosphere have significantly affected the net carbon balance of tropical rainforests, and have warmed the planet substantially driving climate changes through more severe and prolonged heat waves, variability in temperature, increased air pollution, forest fires, droughts, and floods. The role of tropical forests in mitigating climate change is therefore critical. Over the past 30 years almost 600,000 km(2) have been deforested in Brazil alone due to the rapid development of Amazonia, this is the reason why currently the region is one of the 'hotspots' of global environmental change on the planet. Conclusion: Deforestation represents the second largest anthropogenic source of CO2 to the atmosphere, after fossil fuel combustion. There are many causes of deforestation, including socioeconomic and natural factors, such as clearcutting for agriculture, ranching and development, unsustainable logging for timber, as well as droughts, fires and degradation due to climate change. About natural causes of forest degradation, in the context of the Amazon, the major agent of change in the forest ecosystem would most likely be decreased dry-season precipitation. Of the 23 global climate models employed by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) in their 2007 report, 50-70% predict a substantial (above 20%) reduction of dry-season rainfall in eastern Amazonia under mid-range greenhouse gas emissions scenarios, 40% in central Amazonia and 20% in the west. While annual carbon emissions from fossil-fuel combustion have been continually increasing since 1960s, historical trends of deforestation and associated carbon emissions have remained poorly understood.
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