Zoonotic diseases result from pathogens jumping between animals and humans. Think rabies, lyme disease, West Nile virus, HIV, Ebola, #COVID19.
As #COVID19 ravages our communities, we all understand the impact they can have. #EndTheTrade (1/9)
Between 1940 and 2004, more than 335 emerging infectious disease outbreaks, involving 183 distinct pathogens, were reported worldwide. More than 50 per decade.
Today, the rate of disease emergence is increasing. #WorldZoonosesDay (2/9)
As we fight #COVID19, we can’t be shortsighted. We must act to reduce the long-term risk of future spillover events, which could lead to another pandemic. More: wcs.org/coronavirus#WorldZoonosesDay (3/9)
Ecological degradation increases the overall risk of zoonotic disease outbreaks originating from wildlife. Among other things, our changes to the environment increase contact between humans, livestock, and wildlife pathogens. bit.ly/2Z01UX4 (4/9)
As managers of at least 35% of the world’s remaining intact forests, Indigenous Peoples are key partners in this effort. Supporting their ongoing stewardship will reduce the frequency of human exposure to wildlife and help minimize zoonotic spillover. (6/9)
To prevent future pandemics, we must also end commercial trade in wildlife (particularly mammals and birds) for human consumption and close all such markets, as such trade is a known spillover risk. #EndTheTrade
Doesn't apply to Indigenous Peoples & local communities, for whom there may be little alt protein avail. We must value their eyes-on-the-ground & aid capacity for early reporting of sick animals & avoiding contact, to help reduce risk of outbreak spread.
COMMENTARY: If we are to minimize species loss and collapse in ecosystem function, we must do all we can to support Indigenous Peoples’ rights & their efforts to protect their lands & waters, write WCS’s David Wilkie, @sslieberman, & @cyclonewatson. 1/10
Why? Decisions Indigenous Peoples have made over generations have done more to protect species and ecological systems than all the protected areas established and managed by individual countries combined. bit.ly/2SbAIAq
Even 135 yrs after Louis Pasteur successfully vaccinated against rabies, this preventable but deadly viral disease remains one of most neglected in developing world.
Its greatest burden falls on poor rural communities and especially on children in Africa & Asia. #WorldRabiesDay
Since rabid domestic dogs are the cause of 99% of global deaths from rabies in humans, dog vaccination, coupled with education and control of feral dog populations, is the key to fighting this devastating disease. 2/
Since rabies also severely affects endangered wildlife species such as the Ethiopian wolf and African wild dogs, vaccination of domestic dogs at the landscape level by veterinarians also contributes to the conservation of these unique animal species. 3/
Majority of emerging infectious diseases are zoonotic—they jump from wildlife to people. Key to addressing this: our interactions, exploitation, and destruction of nature.
NOW: Christian Walzer of @WcsHealth will be speaking at #NatureForLife Hub. Watch live on our Facebook.
At WCS, our policy recommends stopping all commercial trade in wildlife for human consumption (particularly of birds and mammals) and closing all such markets.
Also: we have to acknowledge that outbreaks are inevitable as the interfaces between wildlife and humans increase, primarily due to deforestation and agricultural expansion, as WCS's Christian Walzer wrote in @FrontiersIn yesterday. doi.org/10.3389/fvets.…#NatureForLife
Nature-based solutions can provide up to 30% percent of the action needed by 2030 to keep global temperature rise below 2°C. #NatureForLife#ClimateChange
Intact forests are estimated to absorb 1/4 of total global carbon pollution annually, but we're losing them far too rapidly. #NatureForLife