Cornell University analysis of population
trends, climate change, increasing pollution and emerging diseases, as published
in the October 1998 journal BioScience, points to one inescapable
conclusion: Life on Earth is killing us.
An estimated 40 percent of world
deaths can now be attributed to various environmental factors, especially
organic and chemical pollutants, according to a study led by David Pimentel,
professor of ecology and agricultural sciences at Cornell.
"More and more of us are living
in crowded urban ecosystems that are ideal for the resurgence of old diseases
and the development of new diseases," said Pimentel, lead author of
the BioScience report titled "Ecology of Increasing Disease: Population
Growth and Environmental Degradation."
"We humans are further stressed
and disease prevalence is worsened by widespread malnutrition and the unprecedented
increase in air, water and soil pollutants," he said.
Global climate change will make matters
even worse for humans and "better" for disease, the Cornell study
predicts. Increased heat favors most human diseases, as well as the diseases
and pests of food crops, and the coming century will see masses of weakened
"environmental refugees" fleeing their home areas in a desperate
search for food, the researchers said.
The disease-ecology analysis was
performed by a team of 11 graduate student researchers who gathered data
from a variety of sources, such as the World Health Organization (WHO) and
the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), as well as previous
studies at Cornell and other universities. Their findings span a planet
made less habitable by human habitation:
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