Friday, April 24, 2020

How destroying wildlife habitats boosts COVID-19

A truck with tree trucks drives through the Amazon forest

Human activity can disrupt wildlife habitats in such a way that it leads to the emergence of new animal-to-human transmitted diseases like COVID-19, in a process known as zoonosis, researchers say.

Zoonosis occurs when an infection carried by an animal, like a bat in the case of COVID-19, is transmissible to a human. Six out of every 10 infectious diseases in people are zoonotic, says Roland Kays, a research professor in the forestry and environmental resources department at North Carolina State University’s College of Natural Resources.

Other zoonotic diseases that have emerged in the past couple of decades have included SARS, H1N1, or the “swine flu,” and AIDS.

“Some of the worst diseases have emerged from illegal wildlife markets,” Kays says. “The animals are sort of stacked on top of each other, they’re usually still alive, they’re still breathing and defecating, so it’s a very good place for viruses to spread.”

Over the past decade, the illegal wildlife trade, a multi-billion-dollar industry, has become substantially worse. The trade has become further organized, and authorities haven’t intervened sufficiently. In March, the Chinese government enacted a permanent ban on the trade and consumption of wild animals following the global outbreak of COVID-19.

“With this international shipping of wildlife, from Africa to Asia and from different parts of North America, many of us are hoping that authorities will finally take this crime seriously now that they realize some of the human health implications of it,” Kays says. “This is the worst one, but it certainly isn’t the first one, and it’s not going to be the last one if we don’t stop it.”

Wildlife habitat encroachment

But wildlife markets aren’t the only sources of zoonotic diseases. As humans continue to convert wildlife habitats and encroach on them for hunting and gathering purposes, we’re setting ourselves up for the further spread of disease.

“People are displaced into natural habitats because they don’t have good alternatives,” says Erin Sills, professor and associate head of the forestry and environmental resources department. “They’re coming into more direct contact with a wider range of wildlife and creating the conditions under which we are likely to see more of these diseases emerge.”

Other factors enable diseases to cross from animals to humans, she says. For example, illegal logging accounts for a large portion of the timber harvested in major tropical forest regions like the Amazon and Congo basins. These illegal activities typically offer poor working conditions, forcing crews to work without access to enough food and to rely on wild resources instead.

“To some degree, that’s traditional. But when you have more people with less food security because they lack access to other resources, you’re going to have more hunting,” Sills says. “It’s going to have both a negative conservation impact on wildlife populations and raise that risk of zoonotic diseases.”

In areas where active habitat conversion occurs, diseases like malaria are widespread. In both remote forest areas and areas with a long history of agricultural conversion, there is less malaria.

However, active conversion typically involves people migrating to the forest frontier where they are exposed to mosquitoes and vulnerable to disease. Deforestation also changes the environment, creating puddles of water, which is the perfect habitat for mosquitos, contributing to spikes in malaria.

Saving natural habitats

Local environmental agencies are working to preserve and prevent natural habitat destruction. In North Carolina, state and federal agencies manage existing public lands, in addition to many land trusts, while smaller organizations work directly with landowners to protect private lands.

International efforts are also underway to slow habitat conversion. In the Brazilian Amazon, where Sills has worked, government policies created in the 1970s and 1980s drove rapid deforestation. These included subsidized credit for agriculture, extension of land rights if a forest was cleared, and road construction. But during the 2000s, the government pulled back from policies that promote deforestation.

Other efforts to conserve wildlife involve poaching restrictions, dealing with the conflict between wildlife and livestock, and reducing direct human impacts on wildlife.

For example, experts have developed systems to compensate farmers for livestock losses due to encroachment from wildlife, such as jaguars preying on cows and donkeys, if they agree not to hunt the wildlife in retaliation.

“The public health risk inherent in poaching and wildlife markets is a new motivation for these types of programs,” Sills says. “I hope that will lead to more resources and a more coordinated effort to address these issues.”

Pandemics in developing countries

The future of our planet depends on preventive measures to stop further wildlife destruction. Various parts of the world already experience declines in the wildlife population, and if proper action is not taken, those species will become extinct.

“From the wildlife perspective, if we don’t put a stop to it, we’ll lose the wildlife, we’ll change the forest, we’ll change the ecosystem services,” Kays says. “From the human perspective, especially with these markets, we’ll have another outbreak. SARS wasn’t that long ago and years later we have another one. When you add the dense human populations with global travel, this allows the epidemic to really spread.”

With this loss of ecosystem services comes a risk of losing resources critical for basic survival and production. When we lose rainforests, the hydrological system is changed, which means the Earth will likely lose patterns of rainfall on which agriculture is dependent.

As further habitat conversion occurs, from forests to pasture or crop fields, additional carbon is being emitted, and the climate is changing rapidly. With zoonotic diseases like COVID-19, the significant unknowable risk the world faces come to light: loss of biodiversity.

“We are taking a huge risk as we reduce biodiversity, and we don’t know what the consequences will be,” Sills says. “We don’t know what future issues we won’t be able to deal with, because we’ve lost the species and genetic variation that would have given us the resources to deal with it. We don’t know when we’ll reach a tipping point, and we’ll lose valuable ecosystem services that are based on biodiversity.”

As COVID-19 expands into lower-income countries, additional constraints and pressures arise. Some of these countries lack the capacity to deal with the pandemic.

“It could create such severe economic disruption and increases in poverty that it will put us back in a vicious cycle where people will have no choice but to continue pushing into natural habitats and continue relying on wildlife populations for subsistence,” Sills says.

“There’s potential, on the one hand, to really learn from this, and there’s potential, on the other hand, to go into a vicious circle. I think which direction we go depends in part on how much we’re thinking about the whole world and people who are in these different countries with different economies and different habitats, and recognizing that dealing with the pandemic and its economic fallout in those places is our problem, too.”

Source: NC State

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