More People Sneezing and Wheezing — Climate Change at Work?

Doctors say rising temperatures make plants bloom more.

ByABC News
May 3, 2007, 7:17 PM

May 3, 2007 — -- It's a montage of misery: sneezing, dripping, eye-watering allergies to pollen in the air. There's an increase in cases of asthma, believed to be closely linked.

What's going on?

"We're seeing more pollen production probably as a result of greenhouse gases, global warming," said Dr. Clifford Bassett, a Fellow of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology.

"It's a super-mega pollen burst," he said. "Young people, elderly people, coming in and saying, 'Doc, I've never had this before, what's going on?'"

Bassett says there was a doubling of asthma cases between 1980 and 2004.

Researchers say the mechanism is fairly basic: there is more carbon dioxide in the air, which means more flowering plants, which means more sneezing and wheezing.

Plants, of course, thrive on carbon dioxide, just as animals and human beings thrive on oxygen. For people with asthma or allergies, though, it is too much of a good thing.

"What you see in an urban area is sort of a microcosm of the climate to come," said Lewis Ziska, a weed ecologist at the U.S. Department of Agriculture. "Plants are not as sexy as polar bears or penguins, but in terms of how they affect human society, they have a much greater impact."

Ziska pointed to a tree.

"Here's an oak tree that's seven or eight feet tall, and while its shade is certainly welcome in summertime, the amount of pollen it can produce is not during the springtime.

"So there's both benefit and curse associated with climate change impacts."

Scientists say that since average temperatures and carbon dioxide levels have been rising in the past few decades, that may help explain why the misery index has been going up, too. Other possible causes, such as new pollutants, are also being investigated.

Medicine is working to keep up with the increase in allergy cases. The newest allergy medications relieve symptoms without the drowziness typically caused by older remedies.