Abstract
The extent to which vector-borne diseases (VBDs) have shaped human
history remains under-recognized, even in the disease ecology community,
despite several well-known examples. Although they represent a
significant threat to global human health, accounting for more than one
billion cases and one million deaths annually, VBDs have coexisted with
humans since the advent of civilization and have migrated with humans
around the world. Here, we synthesize historical, anthropological, and
archaeological evidence and examine it through an ecological lens to
illustrate how four major VBDs—plague, malaria, yellow fever, and
trypanosomiasis—have shaped the course of human history through three
main pathways: (1) outcomes of colonialism, imperialism, war, and
conflict; (2) human interactions with the environment; and (3)
intrasocietal human interactions. For example, malaria tipped the
American Revolution toward the Continental Army; plague promoted
reforestation in Europe; yellow fever entrenched African slavery in
colonies in the Americas; trypanosomiasis impeded large settlements and
central governments in pre-colonial sub-Saharan Africa. By drawing
comparisons across diseases, time periods, and geographic locations, we
show how VBDs have historically affected human populations, from the age
of early Homo sapiens to the modern context, and how they continue to
impact the world.