Satellite monitoring can effectively predict cholera outbreaks in India, Bangladesh
November 11th, 2008 - 5:25 pm ICT by ANI London, November 11 (ANI): Scientists have found that cholera outbreaks can be predicted using satellite monitoring of marine environments, especially in India and Bangladesh where such epidemics occur regularly.
Professor Rita Colwell, from the Institute for Advanced Computer Studies at the University of Maryland, says that she has studied cholera outbreaks for over 30 years, and found that they follow seasonal increases in sea temperature.
She points out that the number of tiny animals increases following a rise in sea temperature, and they bring the cholera pathogen into the drinking water supply.
The researcher believes that the satellite monitoring, combined with their findings thus far, may holds the key to preventing cholera epidemics.
“We can use the current data taken from the satellites to predict when the onset of cholera epidemics will occur, it allows public health authorities to pinpoint exactly when to allocate resources or implement warnings about drinking the water,” the BBC quoted her as saying.
Rita revealed that her team used the satellites to pick up sea temperature changes in the Bay of Bengal, and measured the amount of phytoplankton, the tiny marine plants that feed ocean ecosystems.
She said that their analysis showed that cholera outbreaks in Kolkata and Matlab in Bangladesh occurred soon after seasonal rises in sea temperature, which in turn lead to increases in phytoplankton densities.
The researcher pointed out that the cholera pathogen lives naturally in the gut of a zooplankton species - tiny marine animals called copepods, these feed on the phytoplankton.
According to her, copepods find their way into the water supply in low-lying parts of Bangladesh and India when sea levels rise.
She suggests that simple cloth filters can be used to remove the copepods, which in turn may be helpful in reducing the incidence of cholera.
“We found we could reduce cholera 40-50 per cent by just filtering out the plankton,” she said.
She and her colleagues hope that, through the use of satellite and future studies on what is happening further out to sea, they will soon develop a tool to predict cholera outbreaks weeks or months before they occur. (ANI)
- Scientists to use satellite imagery to predict disease outbreaks - Oct 09, 2008
- Using sari to filter water can provide protection against cholera - May 20, 2010
- They keep cholera at bay with a simple sari - May 20, 2010
- Remote satellite imaging may help predict infectious disease outbreaks - Sep 03, 2008
- Cholera epidemics in Bangladesh linked to Bengal Delta River discharge - Nov 05, 2009
- Global warming 'affecting food chain, carbon cycling in Arctic Ocean' - Mar 03, 2011
- Scientists find culprit behind dying 'doughnut' of Michigan Lake - Sep 04, 2010
- Warmer oceans may increase food for fish - Aug 25, 2009
- Stockholm Water Prize conferred on US scientist - Sep 10, 2010
- Now, predict the next cholera outbreak from space - Apr 02, 2008
- Marine bacteria pitch in to help clean Deepwater Horizon spill - May 28, 2010
- Cholera epidemic kills 11 in Ghana - Apr 05, 2012
- Will evolution succumb to climate change? - Jun 09, 2011
- Global warming causes rise of gigantic mucus-like sea blobs - Oct 09, 2009
- Cholera epidemic in Haiti may exceed UN projections: Study - Mar 16, 2011
Tags: advanced computer studies, bay of bengal, cholera epidemics, cholera outbreaks, cloth filters, densities, drinking water supply, marine animals, marine environments, marine plants, ocean ecosystems, pathogen, public health authorities, rita colwell, sea levels, sea temperature, seasonal increases, temperature changes, tiny animals, zooplankton species