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Examining the Links Between Biodiversity and Human Health: A Multidisciplinary Approach

Examining the Links Between Biodiversity and Human Health: A Multidisciplinary Approach. The Biodiversity Crisis Human actions are causing a biodiversity crisis, with species extinctions up to 1000 times higher than background rates --Pimm et al. 1995.

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Examining the Links Between Biodiversity and Human Health: A Multidisciplinary Approach

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  1. Examining the Links Between Biodiversity and Human Health: A Multidisciplinary Approach

  2. The Biodiversity Crisis Human actions are causing a biodiversity crisis, with species extinctions up to 1000 times higher than background rates --Pimm et al. 1995

  3. Biodiversity loss is accelerating From WWF, “Living Planet Report,” 2004.

  4. Global Decline Proportion of threatened bird species (blue is highest) Davies et al. 2006 Best predictors of extinction risk are human impacts, such population density and agricultural activity. Conservation priorities should focus on areas of high human density as well as best remaining habitat.

  5. Mata Atlântica Golden-lion tamarin In Brasil, Mata Atlântica has declined by more than 90%. Intensive deforestation causes massive species losses because new habitats cannot sustain viable populations of forest-dependent species

  6. Ecosystem Services As provided by the diversity of life on earth Ecosystem Services as provided by the diversity of life on earth Provisioning Services Food Freshwater Wood and fiber Fuel Clean Air Medicines Regulating Services Climate regulation Flood regulation Disease regulation Water purification Cultural Services Aesthetic Cultural Recreational Spiritual Supporting Services Nutrient cycling Primary production Soil formation Adapted from the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment, 2005.

  7. Chemical Diversity: The Imaginative Leap 60% of cancer drugs from natural compounds 75% of drugs for infectious diseases from natural compounds Bryostatin The bryozoan Bugula neritina has anticancer properties. With most of the world’s phyla, the oceans may be the medicine chest of 21st century Michellamine B African liana, Ancistrocladus korupensis, from Cameroon produces a novel anti-HIV compound. Significant amounts needed for preclinical investigation.

  8. Chemical Diversity: The Imaginative Leap Vacina de sapo Campinas Indian Reserve, Acre, Brasil. Shamans administered the kambô remedy, known as vacina de sapo or frog vaccine. Collected by catching kambô, tying it spread- eagled between posts, and collecting slime from its back. Frog is released and dried poison is rehydrated before application. Potential applications include hypertension, strokes, and other illnesses. Profits to be shared with traditional users. World Bank estimates $65 billion potential from traditional medicines

  9. The Third Epidemiologic Transition? • First during transition to agriculture (10,000 yr BP) • Rise in infectious disease • Emerging zoonotics and increased virulence of human pathogens • Second during Industrial Revolution (19th century) • Shift from infectious to chronic diseases • Increased water and air pollution linked to higher rates of cancer, allergies, birth defects, and impeded mental development • Third during period of globalization and ecological collapse • Rise of emerging and re-emerging diseases and antibiotic resistance • Accelerated globalization of human disease ecologies • Barret at al. 1998

  10. New infectious diseases appear to be emerging and re-emerging at a faster rate Fauci 2006 75% of new infectious diseases are zoonotic in origin

  11. How can a decline in biodiversity affect human health? Disease emergence in past 30 years is primarily the result of social, demographic, and environmental transformation since World War II Anthropogenic environmental changes drive infectious disease emergence throughout the continuum from humans to wildlife to domestic animals and within plant host populations Vector-borne diseases, with much of their life cycle outside of the human host, may be most sensitive to change in environmental conditions

  12. Biodiversity and West Nile Virus Mosquito-borne disease; wild birds serve as the primary reservoir hosts Factors accounting for variation in WNV prevalence are poorly known Ezenwa et al (2006) examined the diversity of bird reservoirs in association with West Nile virus infection in mosquitoes across Louisiana.

  13. Infection rates of Culex mosquitoes declined with increase of nonpasserine species richness

  14. The lower infection rates were correlated with lower numbers of human cases of West Nile virus. Links between high biodiversity and reduced disease risk may help account for distribution patterns

  15. Biodiversity and Lyme disease Nymphal tick infections Ostfeld and LoGiudice 2003 Reduced reservoir biodiversity correlates with increased risk of Lyme disease transmission to humans and may be a general rule of frequency-dependent transmission

  16. LoGuidice et al. 2003 Mammalian species from squirrels (Sq) to skunks (Sk) can reduce the effect of white-footed mice, the most competent reservoir of Lyme disease, on tick infection. 90% of ticks feeding on white-footed mice become infected with Lyme bacterium Only 15% of ticks feeding on squirrels become infected with Lyme bacterium Species richness may be only part of the problem, abundance also plays a role

  17. Conditions for dilution effect • Generalist vector • Variation in reservoir competence among hosts • Positive correlation between reservoir competence and percentage of tick meals supplied by hosts in the community Logiudice et al. 2003

  18. Deforestation and Spread of Vector-Borne Diseases Low biting rate High biting rate % Forest in 2 x 2 km grid Vittor et al. 2006 Deforested sites in the Peruvian Amazon had greater mosquito (A. darlingi) transmission rates of malaria compared to sites with less habitat alteration.  Biting rates were 278 times higher in deforested areas than rates for forests

  19. Forest fragmentation and disease transmission Loss of biodiversity increases the frequency of interspecific interactions, in turn increasing pathogen transmission Intensity of gastrointestinal parasite infection is elevated in red colobus monkeys inhabiting forest fragments with reduced plant biodiversity and high rates of human encroachment (Golberg & Gillespie) High levels of antibiotic resistance in bacteria from chimpanzees in locations where humans have been encroaching upon their habitats

  20. Biodiversity change in forest systems Bat populations deprived of their primary food sources sought alternative hosts: humans In rural areas, shift occurred when pigs and cattle were eliminated Massive attacks occurred in gold mining camps of Amazon when food sources were depleted because of overhunting and noise (Confalonieri 2001)

  21. Wildlife Trade and Disease Emergence Consumption of wild animal meat Central Africa: more that 1 billion kg per year Amazon Basin: 67-164 million kg per year approximately 6.4 to 15.7 million animals Outbreaks, including SARS, have caused hundreds of billions of dollars of economic damage globally One regulatory approach is to decrease the rate of contact among species at this interface created by wildlife trade Karesh et al 2005

  22. Global Warming and Spread of Vector-Borne Disease 2050 Present Projected spread of Ae aegyptii, dengue vector, in Australia by 2050 McMichael et al. 2006

  23. Biodiversity-Health Research at US Environmental Protection Agency • Exploratory research funding • How do anthropogenic drivers of changes in biodiversity directly affect the transmission of human disease? • What are the mechanisms that connect these issues? • Multidisciplinary approach to exploring root causes of disease emergence and spread to assist in prevention and mitigation

  24. Workshop on Biodiversity and Human Health Sept. 14-15, 2006, at Smithsonian Institution Washington, DC Convene interdisciplinary workshop of researchers, practitioners, and decision makers in ecology, public health, social sciences, and remote sensing to discuss • the state of the science • important research priorities • risk analysis and creation of monitoring and forecasting network • types of data and models needed to map the relationship between biodiversity decline and EIDs

  25. Partners and Collaborators Yale Center for EcoEpidemiology Institute of Ecosystem Studies Asia-Pacific Institute of Tropical Medicine and Infectious Diseases National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) NASA Ames Research Center World Federation of Public Health Associations American Public Health Association (APHA) World Health Organization (WHO) Smithsonian Institution

  26. Protecting biodiversity, protecting human health Environmental factors contribute to emerging diseases and environmental approaches can reduce their burden Develop new tools to integrate data for improved understanding of relationships between biodiversity and human health Use earth observation and field data to track and analyze global relationships between habitat alteration, biodiversity loss, vector ecology, and the emergence and spread of infectious disease Inform decision-making to benefit society Develop new constituency, momentum, and approaches for conserving biodiversity and protecting endangered species

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