Higher carbon dioxide levels and warmer temperatures are causing plants to increase their pollen production. When the season turns to spring, flowers begin to bloom, trees turn green, and the sun shines longer. But if you’re like almost one-third of adults in the US, you might be experiencing watery eyes, a tickly throat, and a runny nose. With spring comes pollen, which makes breathing air more difficult.
But
it’s getting worse: With climate change shifting weather patterns and causing
an early, more extended pollen high, we could all be sneezing more than usual.
According to Dr. Kathleen May, president of the American College of Allergy,
Asthma, and Immunology, exposure to pollen repeatedly for extended periods may
cause symptoms in people not previously prone to allergies.
“If
you live with seasonal allergies and feel like the pollen seasons feel longer
and longer every year, you may be right,” wrote Paul Gabrielsen, a science
writer at the University of Utah, in 2021. “[P]ollen seasons start 20 days earlier,
are 10 days longer, and feature 21 percent more pollen than in 1990—meaning
more days of itchy, sneezy, drippy misery.”
These
facts came to light as part of research conducted between 1998 and 2018 across
the United States and Canada. The research also found that climate change alone
contributed to an increase of about 8 percent in the amount of pollen
production.
In
fact, according to a 2022 study published in the journal Nature, a change in
temperature leads to an increase in annual pollen emissions by 16 to 40
percent. In the US, the continued release of carbon dioxide from various
polluting sources will eventually lead to a 200 percent increase in pollen by
the end of the 21st century.
Allergy
specialist Dr. Kari Nadeau, chair of the department of environmental health at
the Harvard School of Public Health, blames global warming. “There are these
extreme, chaotic conditions that climate change is associated with,” Nadeau
told Boston 25 News in March 2023. “And that warming is affecting our pollen
seasons.”
Nadeau
pointed out that climate change leads to trees “getting the wrong message,”
causing them to release pollen earlier than they normally would. “So my
patients, for example, otherwise would have started allergy season in March,
now they’re having allergy season start January-February.”
Pollen: Pervasive Problem
One
of the most common pollen allergies is hay fever, which isn’t new. It was first
described in 1819, when physician John Bostock presented a novel case to the
Medical and Chirurgical Society, calling it a “[c]ase of a periodical affection
of the eyes and chest.” It was the first recorded description of what he later
called “catarrhus aestivus or summer catarrh,” which is now known as hay fever.
Hay
fever has become increasingly common: According to the Asthma and Allergy
Foundation of America, approximately 81 million people in the United States
were diagnosed with hay fever in 2021—about one-quarter of adults and one-fifth
of children. The percentage of people with hay fever varies around the world: a
2022 study of 193,912 adults in 17 countries revealed a prevalence of 14.4
percent on average, ranging from 2.8 percent in Ibadan, Nigeria, to 45.7
percent in Bangkok, Thailand.
It’s
the pollen that’s to blame for these symptoms. When plants reproduce, they have
to get their sex cells together. Pollen carries the male sex cells so it has to
be transferred to the female plant. Many plants use insects, like bees, to
transfer their pollen to other plants, and others rely on wind. The
wind-pollinated plants produce tiny, light pollen that can be carried on a
breeze—fantastic for their reproduction, disastrous for our respiration.
Immune
Response
When
we inhale pollen grains, they can kickstart an immune response in which our
body is trying to attack them. Our immune system can overreact to the harmless
pollen: The sneezing, the watery eyes, and the histamines that make your nose
itchy are designed to kill or eject the pollen. If you’re prone to allergic
rhinitis, the more pollen you’re exposed to, the worse your symptoms.
Not
every person suffering from hay fever is, however, allergic to every kind of
pollen. It tends to be seasonal: In the spring, tree pollens from birch, oak,
and mountain cedar cause the most problems, while grass and weeds like mugwort
and nettle lead to allergies in the summer, with weeds like ragweed (the leading
cause of hay fever nationwide) and fungus spores causing symptoms in autumn.
These
allergies have worsened over time thanks to climate change, which is causing an
increase in pollen release, likely due to the flowers growing larger and
producing more pollen. With colder countries experiencing warmer weather due to
global warming, “pollen-producing plants are now able to [even] grow there,”
according to Nadeau.
In
2015, the World Allergy Organisation, composed of more than 100 allergy and
immunology societies from around the world, released a statement warning that
climate change will have an impact on when, how long, and how bad the pollen
season will be, “as well as the allergenicity of the pollen.”
“The
strong link between warmer weather and pollen seasons provides a crystal-clear
example of how climate change is already affecting… [people’s] health across
the US,” said William Anderegg, a biologist at the University of Utah, about
research conducted by him and his team that was published in the Proceedings of
the National Academy of Sciences in 2021.
“A
number of smaller-scale studies—usually in greenhouse settings on small
plants—had indicated strong links between temperature and pollen,” noted
Anderegg. “This study reveals that connection at continental scales and
explicitly links pollen trends to human-caused climate change.”
Warmer Weather Means More Pollen
A
2015 study published in PubMed showed that in the decade between 2001 and 2010
in the US, pollen season started on average three days earlier than it did in
the 1990s.
What’s
more, the amount of airborne pollen increased by more than 40 percent. “These
changes are likely due to recent climate change and particularly the enhanced
warming and precipitation at higher latitudes in the contiguous United States,”
concluded the researchers.
Global
warming is also increasing the number of people suffering from hay fever, with
extending warm periods, in turn, increasing the time for pollination, according
to an article in the New Scientist: “Warmer temperatures signal to plants that
it is time to reproduce, leading to pollen seasons that typically start in the
spring.”
Pollen Problem Fueled by Carbon
Dioxide
While
warmer temperatures have led to earlier and longer pollen seasons and more
pollen, rising carbon dioxide levels are also helping plants produce more
pollen. Plants feed on carbon dioxide, so when there’s an abundance of it, they
can produce more pollen. Couple that with warmer temperatures, and you’ve got
the ideal conditions for plant growth and reproduction, which means more
allergens for us.
Take
the invasive and highly allergenic plant ragweed, for example. Referring to
research published in 2005, a 2020 article in the European journal Allergy
stated that “recent and projected increases in CO2 could directly increase the
allergenicity of ragweed pollen and consequently the prevalence and/or severity
of seasonal allergic disease.”
The
researchers concluded that “continuing increase in atmospheric CO2 could
directly influence public health by stimulating the growth and pollen
production of allergy-inducing species such as ragweed.”
Another
2002 study, which looked at the effects of CO2 on ragweed pollen production,
stated that the doubling of CO2 in environmentally controlled greenhouses
resulted in ragweed pollen emissions increasing by 61 percent.
Lewis
Ziska, assistant professor at the Columbia Mailman School of Public Health—who
was previously a research plant physiologist with the US Department of
Agriculture (USDA)—said that the intensity of an allergic reaction depends on
how much pollen is released, the duration of the exposure, and how allergenic
the pollen is. In ragweed, these three factors work strongly together. “What’s
unique about ragweed is that it produces so much pollen—roughly a billion
grains per plant,” Ziska said, according to a 2016 article written by Charles
W. Schmidt for the journal Environmental Health Perspectives.
No Escape to the City
One
might be tempted to think that hay fever would be less of a problem in the
city, away from all the trees and weeds, but the opposite appears to be true.
Similar results were observed outside the lab in downtown Baltimore, where
Ziska and his team planted ragweed in 2002. The area was 3.5 degrees Fahrenheit
warmer and had 30 percent more carbon dioxide than the countryside. The ragweed
“thrived, growing bigger, and puffing out larger plumes of pollen than its
country counterpart,” reported Rachel Becker in the Verge.
In
fact, more vehicles and resulting CO2 emissions, urbanization, and several
other factors are causing “[a] greater presentation of respiratory allergy
caused by pollen in patients living in urban areas compared with those living
in rural areas.”
Ragweed
may thrive in our cities, but there’s a more significant—and taller—problem:
The trees planted to provide shade and beauty are making our allergies worse.
“Many
people believe that the more trees you have in a city’s green infrastructure,
the more they act as a biofilter,” said Amena Warner, head of clinical services
at Allergy UK, during an interview. “But are they the right kind of trees? In
urban areas, particularly in London, there’s a lean toward planting birch
trees, which are highly allergenic. When they’re in cities, people can’t escape
the pollen easily, and it’s virtually indestructible unless it’s wet.”
That
means the pollen that collects on your clothes, the bottom of your shoes, and
in your hair during your afternoon stroll could plague you until it rains or is
washed away. That, said Warner, extends the time you’re in contact with pollen,
even out of pollen season. “The UK has some of the highest prevalence rates of
allergic conditions in the world,” according to Allergy UK, with more than 20
percent of its population suffering from one or more allergic disorders.
“It’s
important that the right tree is planted in the right place,” said Warner. “We
want to raise awareness of why planting allergenic birch trees in urban areas
can increase hay fever and other respiratory conditions.”
So,
if we know the pollen from birch trees (and lots of others) is causing allergic
reactions, why are they still dominating our city streets? “Mainly because they
seem to be fashionable,” said Warner. “They have this lovely silvery bark, and
they’re long and graceful with a beautiful sweeping canopy that gently sways in
the wind. And they don’t drop fruit—in a city, you want trees with a low
cleanup cost.”
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