Could a frozen ancient virus thawed by climate change cause the next pandemic?
ABC RN /
By Sam Nichols for Future Tense
Posted Mon 8 May 2023 at 3:00pmMonday 8 May 2023 at 3:00pm
Climate change threatens human life in many ways but one of the less obvious could be a rise in pandemics.
A warming climate could release ancient pathogens, such as bacteria and viruses, that have been frozen in permafrost in the polar regions for millennia, Jean-Michel Claverie tells ABC RN's Future Tense.
"We know for certain that bacteria can remain dormant but alive for probably up to 500,000 years in permafrost. And so at that point, this is the very beginning of Homo sapiens. Our species was just emerging [at that time]," says the emeritus professor of medicine at France's Aix Marseille University.
Dr Claverie and his team of researchers recently published their findings on seven ancient viruses found in Siberia's permafrost. One was almost 50,000 years old and still infectious.
He says scientists don't yet know exactly how ancient diseases could impact living species today – animals or humans. In 2021, it was reported that more than 100 ancient strains of bacteria found in Siberia's permafrost were resistant to antibiotics.
The professor says that if an ancient disease – like a virus that was lethal for a woolly mammoth – did spread across the world, it could have dangerous implications for humans.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2023-05-09/ancient-viruses-climate-change-global-pandemic-risk/102277398