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    Home»Health»Melting Arctic Ice May Unleash Ancient Deadly Diseases, Scientists Warn
    Health

    Melting Arctic Ice May Unleash Ancient Deadly Diseases, Scientists Warn

    By University of SharjahApril 23, 20258 Comments7 Mins Read
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    Ice Frozen Virus
    Melting Arctic ice is unleashing disease risks as people and wildlife come into closer contact. Scientists warn of ancient microbes and call for global cooperation to prevent future outbreaks. Credit: SciTechDaily.com

    Melting Arctic ice increases human and animal interactions, raising the risk of infectious disease spread. Researchers urge early intervention and surveillance.

    Climate change is opening new pathways for the spread of infectious diseases such as brucellosis, tularemia, and E. coli in the Arctic, according to a broad international team of scientists with expertise in human, animal, and environmental health in the North Pole.

    The researchers published their findings in the journal Science of the Total Environment, showing how melting ice is making new areas accessible for travel and industry, bringing people into closer contact with what were once isolated Arctic ecosystems.

    They caution that the thawing of soil that has been frozen for thousands of years could release dormant microbes preserved in the remains of dead animals and other organisms, increasing the risk of disease outbreaks with pandemic potential.

    Potential Routes of Transmission of the Zoonotic Parasite Toxoplasma gondii
    Potential routes of transmission of the zoonotic parasite Toxoplasma gondii in the North, with focus on free-ranging wildlife hosts and the shared environment. Credit: Reprinted and modified with permission from Springer Nature: Springer, Toxoplasmosis in Northern Regions. Source: Bouchard et al. (2022). Adapted under a Creative Commons Attribution License CC BY 4.0.). Science of the Total Environment (2024)

    The authors recommend actions “to enhance awareness and management of existing and emerging zoonoses with epidemic and pandemic potential while also focusing on the impacts of various environmental stressors and lifestyle factors on zoonoses in the Arctic.”

    Industrial activity and ancient microbes

    As the ice in the Arctic melts, more industries and people are flocking to the area, raising the chance for infectious diseases to spread, says Dr. Khaled Megahed Abass of the University of Sharjah and a co-author, stressing that “permafrost thawing could even release ancient bacteria or viruses that have been frozen for thousands of years.”

    In their extensive review, the authors analyze scientific studies about and government documents from the Arctic, with a particular focus on Canada, Alaska, Greenland, and Northern Europe.

    “The aim of this investigation was to understand what lessons we can learn the past to help Arctic communities better prepare for future health risks,” adds Dr. Abbas. “Climate change and pollution are affecting both animal and human health — our research looked into how these two forces are interconnected. As the Arctic warms faster than most other parts of the world, we’re seeing changes in the environment—like melting permafrost and shifting ecosystems—that could help spread infectious diseases between animals and people.”

    Zoonotic pathogens and permafrost thaw

    In scientific jargon, these diseases are called zoonotic pathogens with the ability to jump from wildlife to humans, especially when human activities and animal habitats overlap in a manner upsetting environmental balance. The pathogens may be parasitic, viral, or bacterial. They can include unconventional agents with the ability to spread to humans through different means like water food or the environment.

    Climate change is blamed for the erratic and long-term shifts in the Earth’s weather and temperature with scientists reporting a world that has been warming up quickly in the past decades.

    One Health Concept Diagram
    The One Health concept of the Arctic showing how the large number of environmental stressors driving zoonotic infectious diseases, and where the cycle can be broken through evidence-based collective action. Credit: Science of the Total Environment (2024)

    The Earth’s warming is behind the permafrost thaw – a process which refers to the melting of the ice in the frosty soil of Arctic regions. A thawing permafrost can have grave consequences on the environment and the inhabitants as the frozen soil melts.

    The study is an extensive review of the literature and government documents from the North Pole in which a broad international consortium of scientists with a wide range of expertise “describe a selection of case studies highlighting the importance of a One Health approach to zoonoses in the circumarctic, encompassing human health, animal health, and environmental health aspects,” the authors write.

    One health approach and global warning

    The significance of the study emerges from the authors’ adoption of and reliance on the One Health approach in analyzing previous literature and government reports documenting transformations taking place in the Arctic due to climate change.

    In their extensive review, they attempt to sustainably balance and optimize the health of ecosystems in the Arctic, recognizing that health issues, whether related to people, animals, plants, or the environment, are closely linked and interdependent.

    Seroprevalence of Antibodies
    Seroprevalence of antibodies to Toxoplasma gondii in people across Inuit Nunangat and foxes as sentinels of environmental transmission in northern Canada. Credit: (Bouchard et al., 2022). Adapted under a Creative Commons Attribution License CC BY 4.0. Science of the Total Environment (2024)

    The study, according to Abass, shows that “local communities and researchers have already noticed signs of these changes, and some are adapting—but many risks are still poorly understood.”

    Dr. Abass warns that what is happening “in the Arctic doesn’t stay in the Arctic. The environmental stressors we studied have ripple effects that reach far beyond the polar regions.

    Urgent need for surveillance and cooperation

    “Climate change is not only melting ice—it’s melting the barriers between ecosystems, animals, and people. This study shows how environmental disruption can directly impact human health.”

    The authors reaffirm the need to “enhance awareness and manage Arctic zoonoses with pandemic potential,” underscoring the fact that “about three-quarters of all known human infectious diseases are zoonotic including Arctic ones” at a time “pollution, climate change and biodiversity loss aggravate zoonoses transmission in the Arctic.”

    They write, “The cases highlight critical gaps in monitoring and current knowledge, focusing on environmental stressors and lifestyle factors, and they are examples of current occurrences in the Arctic that inform on critically needed actions to prepare us for the future.”

    Average Annual Nephropathia Epidemica (NE, Puumala) Incidences
    Average annual Nephropathia epidemica (NE, Puumala) incidences as observed through the approximate thirty-year climate reference period, across Norway, Sweden, and Finland. Credit: Modified from Thierfelder and Evengård (2021). Science of the Total Environment (2024)

    Dr. Abass says he and colleagues authoring the study are upbeat about the interest their project has already generated. “This research has attracted interest from outside academia. Public health organizations, environmental agencies, and even northern industries (like mining and shipping) are starting to recognize the need to monitor health risks linked to changing Arctic conditions. This includes policymakers concerned about pandemic prevention and food safety in remote areas.”

    The authors see their comprehensive review as a warning for “governments and communities to take action early—before outbreaks occur. It supports the development of better disease surveillance, more robust environmental monitoring, and climate-resilient public health systems. The study also shows the importance of indigenous knowledge in detecting early signs of ecosystem and health changes.”

    The study highlights the importance of international cooperation coupled with transdisciplinary research collaboration. The fact that the findings stem from an international consortium involving over 15 institutions across Europe and Canada, notes Dr. Abass, is a sign “of the significance of multidirectional knowledge exchange, thematic networks and internationalization in addressing climate change issues in the Arctic.”

    Reference: “Environmental stressors and zoonoses in the Arctic: Learning from the past to prepare for the future” by Emilie Andersen-Ranberg, Ingebjørg H. Nymo, Pikka Jokelainen, Anastasia Emelyanova, Solveig Jore, Brian Laird, Rebecca K. Davidson, Sonja Ostertag, Emilie Bouchard, Freja Fagerholm, Kelly Skinner, Mario Acquarone, Morten Tryland, Rune Dietz, Khaled Abass, Arja Rautio, Sjúrður Hammer, Birgitta Evengård, Tomas Thierfelder, Raphaela Stimmelmayr and Christian Sonne, 17 October 2024, Science of The Total Environment.
    DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.176869

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    Arctic Climate Change Infectious Diseases Permafrost Sustainability
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    8 Comments

    1. Dallas Latham on April 23, 2025 2:12 pm

      This has been known for decades. Even worse, the amount of methane that will be released as the permafrost thaws will turn our world into HELL ON EARTH. METHANE IS ONE OF THE WORST GREENHOUSE GASES.. WE WON’T NEED A METEOR STRIKE.

      Reply
      • Shan on April 23, 2025 11:50 pm

        Stop drinking the lie-bral media koolaid – fake climate catastrophe is Soros & Schwab smoke and mirrors to sell you rubbish and control your life.

        Reply
      • Clyde Spencer on April 24, 2025 8:57 am

        You have significantly overrated the danger from methane. For a semi-quantitative analysis of the issue, read my article here: https://wattsupwiththat.com/2023/03/06/the-misguided-crusade-to-reduce-anthropogenic-methane-emissions/

        Reply
    2. Clyde Spencer on April 24, 2025 9:03 am

      “…, Climate change is opening new pathways for the spread of infectious diseases such as brucellosis, tularemia, and E. coli in the Arctic, …”

      It is evident that English is a second language for whoever wrote this article. E. coli, while often associated with different disease pathologies, is not a disease itself. It is a species of bacteria found in the intestinal track of mammals.

      Reply
      • Rob on April 24, 2025 4:58 pm

        The writer is probably a denizen of the USA. USAian is definitely a second language of English. It could be called a “pidgin” language as it is now widespread. Trumpistannian, if it spreads, would be a third such language. The advertising industry has much to answer for, as does modern academic writing.

        Reply
    3. Clyde Spencer on April 24, 2025 9:32 am

      “…, showing how melting ice is making new areas accessible for travel and industry, bringing people into closer contact with what were once isolated Arctic ecosystems.”

      The more isolated and the longer an ecosystem has been isolated, the less likely it is a risk to humans. Disease pathogens and vectors usually co-evolve with their host targets. Many, if not most, diseases are specific to a particular species. That is, they specialize in a host and rarely cross the species barrier. A large virus released from thawing permafrost, which specializes in infecting an amoeba, is not a risk to humans or modern animals. In almost all cases, it is an expanding human population that puts more people into contact with known, modern disease vectors that is responsible for increased infection rates.

      Sometimes a disease can be beneficial. That is, the recognition that milk maids that had experienced cowpox rarely acquired smallpox led to the development of a vaccine for smallpox, which has been declared extinct in the wild.

      Broad-brush, scary stories may serve as effective click-bait, but they unnecessarily alarm the public. It is far better to stick to actual, specific situations such as the H5N1 virus, better known as “bird flu,” to address what we know about target pathogens and their transmission.

      Reply
    4. Clyde Spencer on April 24, 2025 9:46 am

      “The study also shows the importance of indigenous knowledge in detecting early signs of ecosystem and health changes.”

      This remark strongly suggests that what is being discussed by the authors are modern diseases, long endemic in the Arctic, not some ancient diseases that existed before humans occupied the Arctic, and released by melting permafrost.

      Reply
    5. Rob on April 24, 2025 5:07 pm

      “That is, the recognition that milk maids that had experienced cowpox rarely acquired smallpox led to the development of a vaccine for smallpox, which has been declared extinct in the wild.”

      An important comment which has me wondering why there are so many damn-fool anti-vaxxers in our western world. Interestingly, Turkey was ahead of the UK in the smallpox-scarification stakes, some English Lady traveller to Turkey having brought the notion back to England in the early 1700s.

      Reply
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