A warmer world is going to be a sicker world for everything from trees to marine life to people, according to a new report by a panel of U.S. scientists. But opponents remain unconvincing there is 【S1】______ sufficient evidence to support the conclusion. A team of researchers led by Drew Harvell at Cornell University have completed a two-year study into climate-disease links. 'That is 【S2】______ most surprising is the fact that cli mate sensitive outbreak are 【S3】______ happening with so many different types of pathogens—viruses, bacteria and parasites (寄生虫)—as well in such a wide 【S4】______ range of hosts including corals (珊瑚虫), oysters, land plants and birds,' Harvell says. the Co-researcher Richard Ostfeld, an animal ecologist at Institute of Ecosystem Studies, adds, 'This isn't just a question of coral bleaching for a few marine ecologists, or just 【S5】______ a question of malaria (疟疾) for a few healthy officials—the number of similar increases in disease incidence is astonishing. We don't want to be alarmist, but we are alarmed.' The U.S. team found evidence for a variety of routes for climate warming to adverse affect disease spread, For 【S6】______ instance, warmer winters could reduce seasonal die-off many pathogens and their carders, or allow them to move into areas what were previously too cold. The researchers examined a number of human diseases 【S7】______ which spread researchers have connected to warming, including 【S8】______ malaria, Lyme disease, yellow fever and others. Most involved in the expanded range of carriers into higher latitudes. The 【S9】______ authors concede that such connections are controversial because countless factors except climate, such as economics and failed 【S10】______ Prevention measures, play roles in the spread of human diseases. 【S1】