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A killer fungus that infects millions of people a year in hotter climes may soon spread through Europe and into the UK as the world warms further, according to a new study on how climate change spreads disease.
The aspergillus species - which can cause deadly human brain infections, spoil livestock and render crops unsafe to eat - is forecast to spread northwards from Africa and South America into Europe and Asia. How far it spreads will depend on how quickly the world phases out fossil fuels and other drivers of climate change, the paper said, while slow action will put more people at risk.
Global warming is also upping the threat from diseases, such as those spread by mosquitoes like malaria and dengue. Fungi are a growing concern but largely unexplored.
They live in the air, soil and inside our bodies and spread through spores in the air we breathe - but more than 90% are estimated still to be unknown to science. Lead author of the new research, Norman van Rhijn from Manchester University, told Sky News they are "extremely difficult" to treat.
Few antifungal medicines exist, while the fungi themselves are increasingly drug-resistant and hard to spot and diagnose. But these organisms are also essential to a healthy ecosystem, decomposing organic matter and helping to suck up climate-heating carbon dioxide.
'Scary' reality Viewers of the TV show The Last Of Us will be familiar with the threat: the post-apocalyptic drama depicts a brain-altering fungus that has wiped out much of society. But "reality is already scary enough.