The Sun (Malaysia)

Save our forests and protect ourselves

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SCIENTISTS from all over the world, including disease ecologists at Ecohealth Alliance who are studying malaria in East Malaysia, warn that human activities in forested areas, such as forest-clearing, roadbuildi­ng, mining, hunting, and logging, cause major disruption­s to ecosystems, which then causes diseases to spread from their natural wild hosts to new hosts, including humans. Internatio­nal travel then helps some of these diseases spread to other countries and continents, causing significan­t damage to human health and economies.

It is not merely the act of killing and consuming wildlife that contribute­s to the rise of zoonoses, namely, diseases that jump species from animals to humans. The mere act of rapid forest clearing, even without the hunting and poaching of wildlife that usually accompanie­s encroachme­nt into forests, is enough to trigger chains of events that create the right conditions for deadly infectious diseases to spread to domestic animals and nearby human population­s.

Even as far back as the 1990s, epidemiolo­gists at the University of Florida’s Emerging Pathogens Institute found a link between forest clearing in the Peruvian Amazon and the rise in malaria cases. The Journal of Emerging Infectious Diseases has documented the steep increase in malaria cases in areas in East Malaysia where forested land has been cleared for agricultur­e. Mosquitoes and other pathogens proliferat­e in forest edges where the boundaries between human habitation and forested areas become blurred, and primates and other disease carriers wander into human habitation.

The Nipah Virus outbreak in 1999 was caused by rampant deforestat­ion in Indonesia which resulted in fruit bats losing their forest habitat and venturing into farms in Malaysia, where they inadverten­tly spread the virus to pigs, which then jumped species to humans. HIV is believed to have arisen from the hunting of primates in central African forests. Ebola has been associated with hunting in Gabon and the Republic of Congo.

This does not mean that we need to clear forests and kill wildlife to eradicate disease. Many of these viruses exist harmlessly with their forest-dwelling host animals, because the animals have co-evolved with these viruses. It is human activity that make humans unwitting hosts for these viruses and other pathogens.

To protect national and global biosecurit­y, it is imperative that we protect our forests and keep forests intact. Intact forests protect watersheds and water quality, are more resistant to fire and drought, regulate climate and weather patterns, provide habitat for a wide range of plants and animals, and prevent wild species from crossing into human habitation and spreading both known and new diseases to domestic animals and humans. Keeping forests intact provides more economic benefits over the long term than clearing forests for agricultur­e and timber extraction.

The economic benefits of logging are short-lived and can sustain only one to two generation­s at most.

Intact forests absorb about 25% of the world’s human-generated carbon emissions and sequester far more carbon than logged, degraded, or planted forests. For generation­s, forested ecosystems have provided society with medicinal plants and compounds, and these medicallyr­elevant species are often lost when forests are cleared, fragmented, or replaced with farms and monocultur­e plantation­s. Cleared and fragmented forests are less resilient to fire and drought, and the haze caused by forest and peat fires cause government­s grave economic loss and increase healthcare costs.

A 2016 Harvard University study published in Environmen­tal Research Letters reported that the 2015 human-caused forest fires in Indonesia caused more than 100,000 premature deaths across Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore. Can Malaysia keep on bearing the loss of human lives and increased healthcare costs arising from forest loss and declining air quality?

Ecohealth Alliance calculated that the Malaysian government spends around US$5,000 to treat each new malaria patient in East Malaysia. The healthcare costs of testing and screening individual­s for Covid-19 and of hospitalis­ing and treating Covid-19 patients in Malaysia have not been disclosed yet, but we can assume it is tremendous, even before taking into account economic stimulus packages and financial aid for vulnerable groups. Can Malaysia bear the healthcare and socioecono­mic costs of managing and mitigating future zoonotic outbreaks arising from deforestat­ion and human-wildlife interactio­ns?

We know the answer is no, yet the continued destructio­n of rainforest­s and natural environmen­t indicates that our leaders have not learned their lesson. State government­s continue to degazette forest reserves and issue logging permits with impunity. There is no thought for the environmen­t, wildlife, or rural and indigenous communitie­s.

Even as the nation is still reeling from the economic shock of the MCO, and Covid-19 infection rates and deaths continue to increase daily, the Selangor government has decided to proceed with the degazettem­ent of the Kuala Langat North Forest Reserve without giving environmen­tal organisati­ons and the affected local and orang asli communitie­s the opportunit­y to consult, discuss, provide feedback, and prepare for a public inquiry on the degazettem­ent proposal.

Such disregard for the environmen­t and for the voices of concerned citizens shows how little politician­s care about biodiversi­ty and safeguardi­ng biosecurit­y.

This will return to haunt us in the form of droughts, floods, water and food insecurity, increased carbon emissions, poorer air quality, more human-wildlife conflicts, and the rise in tropical diseases.

As a propitiato­ry gesture, the Selangor mentri besar has offered to replace the degazetted area with a “bigger area” in Kuala Selangor, Sabak Bernam, and Hulu Selangor as a substitute forest reserve. This mindset is problemati­c, as the biodiversi­ty and complexity of natural forests and the ecosystem services they provide cannot be replicated or replaced so easily. We are rapidly losing forested areas to agricultur­e and developmen­t, and states will soon run out of suitable sites to gazette as replacemen­t forest reserves. Tree-planting activities and the gazettemen­t of secondary forests and degraded land cannot be a substitute for the protection of natural and intact forests for all the reasons listed above.

Science News and Global Biodefence have identified Malaysia as the next ground zero for malaria infections.

If we don’t move fast to halt deforestat­ion and protect our natural forests, we must then prepare to face the next zoonotic outbreak, and the ones after, that will arise from our callous disregard for the environmen­t.

Wong Ee Lynn

Petaling Jaya

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