Title: Direct effects of climate change on plants in Hungary
1 Direct effects of climate change on plants in
Hungary
- Eszter Erdei, J. Bobvos, T. Hardy, E. Jozsa,
A. Paldy - Natl. Institute of Environmental Health, Natl.
Centre for Public Health, Budapest, Hungary
Metropolitan Institute of State Public Health
Service, Budapest
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3Aim of the study
- To assess the impact of climate variability on
the production of pollen grains and mould spores
in Budapest, Hungary - To examine changes in aeroallergen abundance
related to climatic conditions - To give descriptions of the characteristics of
pollen and spore seasons during longer time
period
4The yearly Taverage in the last 100 years of
Hungary (C)
5Methods
- Pollen and spore database 32 different
allergenic pollen grains and 2 mould spores and
other spores are recorded continuously with
standardized method (Burkard 7-day volumetric
trap) on daily basis by Hungarian Aerobiological
Network - 2 traps in Budapest (average pg/m3 was used),
N4018 observations! - Weather database collected by online air
pollution monitoring stations of the Metropolitan
Institute of State Public Health Service,
Budapest
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7- Consolidated daily aeroallergen counts into 3
groups - spring trees (Alnus, Corylus, Betula, Fraxinus,
Populus, Carpinus etc.) - grasses and summer-autumn weeds (Poaceae,
Ambrosia, Artemisia, Chenopodiacea, ect.) - mold spores (Alternaria, Cladosporium, other
spores, sum)
- Meteorological factors
- temperature (daily min, max, range, 24-hour
average) - humidity (RH )
- sunshine intensity (kW/hour)
- barometric pressure (hPa)
- windspeed (km/hour)
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10- Agrometeorological parameter total heatsums
(growing degree days) were used including
negative T values calculated from 1st January of
every study year till the date of the 1 of the
total yearly catch of the certain allergen
species - -relative percentages of the yearly sums
(separately for the studied years) were compared
to the starting dates of the pollen seasons
(retrospective method, 1 of the total yearly
catch) for 8 allergenic pollen produced plant
species and the total mould spores
11Variations of aeroallergen concentrations in
Budapest 1992-2002
12Linear trends of aeroallergen concentrations
during the 11-years-long study period
ß CI min CI max
PTREE 13,84 11,86 15,82
PGRASS 11,28 9,81 12,75
ALT -1,24 -2,13 -0,346
CLADO 12,30 -1,95 26,55
OS 257,44 212,94 301,94
13Average pollen concentrations by years and trends
in Budapest
Spring blooming trees (birch, ash)
Grasses and ragweed
14Variability of T24 and starting dates of birch
pollen seasons
15Variability of Tmin and starting dates of ragweed
pollen seasons
16Percentages of total heatsum values (SD) at the
starting dates of pollination seasons of 8
allergenic plant species and mould
17Variabilities of heatsum values related to birch
pollination periods starting dates in Budapest
18Variabilities of heatsum values related to
ragweed pollination periods starting dates
19Morbidity data of rhinitis allergica patients in
Hungary
20Number of hospitalized asthmatic patients in
Hungary
21Conclusions
- Increased production of aeroallergens during
study period in Budapest - direct health impact
of climate variability. - Starts of pollen seasons varied remarkably
associations with T24 and Tmin. - The abundance of the most allergenic pollen types
is enhanced moderately during the study period. - Prediction can be made using relative heatsum
values for starting dates of pollen seasons and
fungi spore production.
22Acknowledgement
- Special thank goes to
- Tamás Bodorics for agrometeorological advices
- This work was supported by the Hungarian National
Environmental Health Action Programme (NEHAP)