Go back to nature, leave animals alone
The Seychelles, a string of 115 verdant, rocky islands in the Indian Ocean, recently announced — in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic — that it would protect 30 per cent of its turquoise waters from commercial use. Safeguarding some 410,000 square kilometres of the sea will benefit wildlife on the shore and in the water, including 100,000 giant tortoises and some of the world’s last pristine coral reefs. But, beyond helping such species, establishing the new Marine Protected Areas will also bolster the health, wellbeing, and prosperity of the Seychellois, who number under 100,000.
Currently hosting only a handful of tourists stranded by the pandemic, the country is under a lockdown aimed at preventing the further spread of the virus. President Danny Faure’s decision to press ahead with this protection effort serves as a powerful reminder of the importance of nature to people’s physical and economic wellbeing — and not just in the Seychelles.
The human, economic, and social consequences of the rapid and devastating global spread of the coronavirus will last for years to come. And with the pandemic still unfolding, the most urgent priority is to support those directly affected by the virus and its associated hardships.
This pandemic has also provided us with unprecedented and compelling proof of how closely our fate is linked with the health of the natural world. And right now, our relationship with nature is broken. We have cut down forests, overgrazed grasslands, built ports and roads, and expanded our cities at a rapid rate, destroying countless natural habitats. At the same time, we trade wildlife globally, moving common and endangered species alike as if they were inanimate commodities.
All of this is bringing us into closer and more frequent contact with viruses that can spread from animals to people, including the Covid-19 coronavirus and dozens of other deadly and debilitating illnesses, from HIV to Ebola. Likewise, our degradation of marine ecosystems causes blooms of pathogens that can cause potentially fatal diseases such as cholera.
The world already safeguards 15 per cent of its land and 7 per cent of the ocean. But, for the sake of our health and prosperity, we must do more. Indeed, there is increasing agreement that we need to return half the planet to nature and use the other half responsibly, and that we should start by protecting at least 30 per cent of it by 2030.
Both nature and people would benefit. Research shows that abundant animals, plants, insects, and microbes living in complex, mature ecosystems can limit the spread of disease from animals to people. But natural places do much more than provide a safety net against illness. They also shield us from the destructive power of extreme weather, safeguard us from our own pollution, and supply us with food, medicine, and leisure opportunities.
When the worst of the pandemic has passed and the world embarks on the hard work of nursing its people, societies, and economies back to health, we must not overlook the need to care for nature and let nature care for us. A healthy environment is our best antiviral, and protecting more of it will help us to rebound from this pandemic and stop the next one before it starts.
We need to return half the planet to nature and use the other half responsibly