Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

‘Loss of habitat causing zoonotic outbreaks’

- Jayashree Nandi jayashree.nandi@htlive.com ■

NEWDELHI: A new study has found that the capacity of a majority of wild species to adapt to environmen­tal changes is threatened because of loss of habitat. The findings are crucial because scientists are trying to unravel how the SARS-CoV-2 may have jumped from bats (most likely reservoir of the virus according to latest research) to humans and several scientists have flagged the role of habitat loss behind zoonotic outbreaks

The study, published in Nature journal on Wednesday, says that many wild species need to adapt to survive.

But because of loss of their “niche” habitat, their capacity to evolve is threatened. The global protected area network—forests or other ecosystems protected under law, don’t cover the environmen­tal or climatic conditions required by a majority of 19,937 vertebrate species assessed in the study.

For example, the representa­tion of niche habitat in the protected areas globally is inadequate for 93.1% of amphibian; 89.5% of bird and 90.9% of terrestria­l mammal species, the study has said. An ecological niche is the role a certain species plays in its environmen­t.

The climatic conditions of that place determine how well the species can survive but their capacity to adapt diminishes when they are not connected with their niche.

Inger Anderson, executive director, United Nations Environmen­t Programme (UNEP) tweeted on Wednesday spelling out how pandemics and habitat loss are linked. “Our priority is to prevent spread of Covid 19. In long term it’s important to tackle habitat, biodiversi­ty loss. Never before have so many opportunit­ies existed for pathogens to pass from animals to people.”

The reason for such alarming habitat loss, the study says, is because internatio­nal conservati­on policies have neglected considerin­g niche habitats of species when setting targets for expansion of protected areas.

The authors from the School of Biological Sciences at the University of Brisbane, RSPB Centre for Conservati­on Science in UK and Global Mammal Assessment Programme at the University of Rome, among others, have assessed the representa­tion or coverage of various climatic niches of nearly 2000 species by protected areas globally by overlaying maps.

“We found that existing protected areas are not adequate for conserving habitats that promote evolutiona­ry processes. Later this year, signatorie­s of the Convention on Biodiversi­ty are meeting again to shape conservati­on policies for the coming decade— providing a golden opportunit­y to improve protection of such habitats,” Jeffrey Hanson, co-author of the study wrote, explaining the research paper in Nature. The study also flagged that immune response of many species are affected due to loss of habitat but did not link it with disease outbreaks.

The team identified priority areas for expanding the protected area network globally to include niches of species. These priority areas stretch over 33.8% of the earth’s land and inland water area compared to 17%, which is the present target under the Convention of Biological Diversity.

Some of the priority areas for conservati­on include the tropical Andes—where steep environmen­tal gradients and complex topographi­es have driven evolutiona­ry processes; Cape floristic region and Madagascar; Himalayas, an evolutiona­ry epicentre for bird species .

“In a previous study on six different population­s of the Giant Panda in China, variations in genes related to the immune system, unique to each population, were found. The destructio­n of habitat that supports any of these population­s will result in the loss of those adaptive genes and, consequent­ly, can be detrimenta­l to the survival of the species,” explained Kartik Sunagar, assistant professor at Evolutiona­ry Venomics Lab, which is part of the Centre for Ecological Sciences at the Indian Institute of Science (IISc).

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