
How Humans Made Malaria So Deadly
Interactive Video
•
Geography, Science, Biology
•
11th Grade - University
•
Hard
Wayground Content
FREE Resource
The video discusses the history and evolution of malaria, a deadly mosquito-borne disease. It explains how malaria evolved from an aquatic algae in sub-Saharan Africa and became a human parasite. Initially, malaria was not very deadly due to scattered human populations. However, the advent of agriculture created conditions that allowed a more lethal strain, Plasmodium falciparum, to thrive. This strain spread globally, facilitated by dense human settlements and mosquito breeding grounds. Today, malaria remains a significant health threat, killing nearly half a million people annually.
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