Review of One Health in the Galápagos Islands (Part 2): climate change, anthropogenic activities, and socioeconomic sustainability
Frontiers in Conservation Science,
Journal Year:
2024,
Volume and Issue:
5
Published: Oct. 17, 2024
The
Galápagos
archipelago
is
a
vast
reservoir
of
terrestrial
and
marine
biodiversity
particularly
susceptible
to
human,
animal,
environmental
impacts.
Climate
change,
globalization,
the
blurring
human-domestic
animal-wildlife
interfaces
are
poised
bring
new
threats
challenges
region.
A
One
Health
perspective
that
simultaneously
considers
health
imperative
in
assessing
mitigating
facing
Islands.
Many
Islands
can
ultimately
be
linked
anthropogenic
factors.
In
Part
I
this
review,
we
reviewed
impacts
invasive
species
identified
infectious
diseases
importance.
II
discuss
climate
change
ocean
acidification,
highlight
effects
several
direct
activities,
including
tourism,
overfishing,
pollution,
land
use,
human-wildlife
conflict.
We
also
review
socioeconomic
political
context
Islands,
current
water
energy
sanitation,
economic
stability.
examine
importance
investment
local
development
for
building
resiliency
sustainability
archipelago.
Finally,
impact
COVID-19
pandemic
Throughout
two-part
build
cohesive
picture
by
integrating
past
work,
needs,
emerging
threats.
consider
overarching
goals
conservation,
ecosystem
management,
have
been
previously
defined
both
governmental
non-governmental
stakeholders,
identify
discrete,
implementable,
interdisciplinary
recommendations
will
facilitate
achievement
those
goals.
Language: Английский
Review of One Health in the Galápagos Islands (Part 2): Climate Change, Anthropogenic Activities, and Socioeconomic Sustainability
Published: Nov. 13, 2023
The
Galápagos
archipelago
is
a
vast
reservoir
of
terrestrial
and
marine
biodiversity
particularly
susceptible
to
human,
animal,
environmental
impacts.
Climate
change,
globalization,
the
blurring
human-domestic
animal-wildlife
interfaces
are
poised
bring
new
threats
challenges
region.
A
One
Health
perspective
that
simultaneously
considers
health
imperative
in
assessing
mitigating
facing
Islands.
Many
Islands
can
ultimately
be
linked
anthropogenic
factors.
In
Part
I
this
review,
we
reviewed
impacts
invasive
species
identified
infectious
diseases
importance.
II
discuss
climate
change
ocean
acidification,
highlight
effects
several
direct
human
activities,
including
tourism,
overfishing,
pollution,
land
use,
human-wildlife
conflict.
We
also
review
socioeconomic
political
context
Islands,
current
water
energy
sanitation,
economic
stability.
examine
importance
investment
local
development
for
building
resiliency
sustainability
archipelago.
Finally,
impact
COVID-19
pandemic
Throughout
two-part
build
cohesive
picture
by
integrating
past
work,
needs,
emerging
threats.
consider
overarching
goals
conservation,
ecosystem
management,
have
been
previously
defined
both
governmental
non-governmental
stakeholders,
identify
discrete,
implementable,
interdisciplinary
recommendations
will
facilitate
achievement
those
goals.
Language: Английский