Remote sensing used to track humanity
A U.S. geography professor is using satellite imagery to determine how land use and land cover changes affect human health and food security.
Doug Goodin of Kansas State University employs remote sensing -- the use of sensors on satellites and spacecraft to observe the Earth -- and other data to monitor and forecast the spread of infectious disease.
According to Goodin there is a confluence of change taking place across the globe. The world's population is increasing, the global climate is changing and global ecology is being altered. All are believed related to the emergence of new diseases or re-emergence of old diseases, he said.
Goodin has used the technology to study the re-emergence of mouse-spread hantavirus in the South American country of Paraguay.
"We've been able to understand how human beings have changed the landscape the mice live in," Goodin said. " It brings (the mice) more in contact with each other, so the disease spreads horizontally in the rodent population, and more in contact with people, so there is a greater chance humans can contract this disease."
Goodin discussed the subject during a recent conference in Washington sponsored by the National Academies of Science.
Copyright 2006 by United Press International
According to Goodin there is a confluence of change taking place across the globe. The world's population is increasing, the global climate is changing and global ecology is being altered. All are believed related to the emergence of new diseases or re-emergence of old diseases, he said.
Goodin has used the technology to study the re-emergence of mouse-spread hantavirus in the South American country of Paraguay.
"We've been able to understand how human beings have changed the landscape the mice live in," Goodin said. " It brings (the mice) more in contact with each other, so the disease spreads horizontally in the rodent population, and more in contact with people, so there is a greater chance humans can contract this disease."
Goodin discussed the subject during a recent conference in Washington sponsored by the National Academies of Science.
Copyright 2006 by United Press International
» Next Article in Space & Earth science - Environment: Increasing wildfires in US may be result of global warning, researchers say

Rating: 2.9
Bookmark
Save as PDF
Print
Email
Blog It
Stumble It!


PhysOrg Forum
Video
Editorials
Free Magazines
Free White Papers
Newsletter
Advanced Search
Goto Archive
Suggest a story idea
Send feedback