Review of One Health in the Galápagos Islands (Part 2): Climate Change, Anthropogenic Activities, and Socioeconomic Sustainability DOI Open Access
Patricio Vega-Mariño, Isabel A. Jimenez,

Tamia Villacres

et al.

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

Review of One Health in the Galápagos Islands (Part 2): climate change, anthropogenic activities, and socioeconomic sustainability DOI Creative Commons
Patricio Vega-Mariño, Isabel A. Jimenez,

Tamia Villacres

et al.

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

Citations

1

Review of One Health in the Galápagos Islands (Part 2): Climate Change, Anthropogenic Activities, and Socioeconomic Sustainability DOI Open Access
Patricio Vega-Mariño, Isabel A. Jimenez,

Tamia Villacres

et al.

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

Citations

0