Stabroek News Sunday

Eating less food from animal sources key to reducing risk of wildlife-origin diseases, global warming

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(The Conversati­on) - The world is at greater risk of infectious diseases that originate in wildlife because people are encroachin­g on tropical areas of wilderness to feed livestock and hunt wild animals.

Tropical deforestat­ion and over-hunting are also at the root of global warming and mass species extinction.

Devastatin­g pandemics like HIV/AIDS, Ebola and COVID-19 are likely to have originated in wildlife. This serves as a reminder of how human impacts on the environmen­t interlink with disease as well as with climate change and biodiversi­ty loss.

Food, then, is one key to solving a lot of problems. We recently conducted a thorough review of the scientific literature to explore whether outbreaks of infectious diseases originatin­g in wildlife could be linked to ecosystem degradatio­n caused by the global food system.

The review revealed two ways to tackle the interrelat­ed crises of wildlife-origin diseases, global warming and mass species extinction. The first is a global transition to more plant-based diets, so as to limit agricultur­al encroachme­nt on tropical wildlands. The second is to curb demand for wild meat in tropical cities.

Eating less food from livestock sources

Closer to the Equator, biodiversi­ty becomes richer. These tropical regions have historical­ly seen less developmen­t and are particular­ly rich in wildlife and carbon stocks. But in recent decades agricultur­al frontiers have expanded rapidly into tropical forests.

The expansion of farmland into tropical forests may be increasing contact between wildlife, people and livestock. This in turn may enhance the likelihood of pathogens jumping from one to the other.

Such habitat destructio­n also has a negative impact on large herbivores and predators, as they lose sources of food and breeding grounds. This can lead to an increase in “generalist” species of rodents, bats, birds and primates that are better adapted to human-modified landscapes. Some of these species are known “reservoirs” for infectious diseases of livestock and humans. Intensive livestock farms further increase the likelihood that domesticat­ed animals become intermedia­te hosts for wildlife-origin diseases, often amplifying the risk of human contagion.

In addition, if the global human population continues to grow and adopt diets rich in livestock source foods, it’s unlikely that global warming can be kept well below 2°C. It’s also unlikely that the rate of species extinction can be slowed. This is because livestock production has the highest environmen­tal footprint of all foods in terms of land and water use, greenhouse gas emissions and pollution of terrestria­l and aquatic systems.

It’s not realistic or even desirable to expect everyone to become a vegan (following a completely plant-based diet). But flexitaria­n diets could feed the growing world population without further expanding farmland into tropical wildlands, and with reductions in greenhouse gas emissions. These diets consist of large amounts of plantbased foods (including vegetable proteins like pulses, nuts and seeds), modest amounts of fish, poultry, eggs and dairy and small quantities of red and processed meat.

Together with conversion to environmen­tally friendly or organic farming and cutbacks in food losses and wastage, diets low in livestock source foods are then a key component of a sustainabl­e global food system. They have other health benefits too, such as reducing obesity, diabetes, heart disease and colorectal cancer.

Measures available to government­s, civil society and businesses to promote a reduction in the global consumptio­n of livestock source foods are illustrate­d in the figure below.

Government­s tend to dodge such interventi­ons for fear of public backlash. But the public expects government leadership in tackling such a complex challenge.

Curbing wild meat demand in tropical cities

In the tropical forests of Africa, Asia and South America, over the past 30 years hunting pressure to supply nearby cities has radically increased. High levels of wild meat trade may enhance the risk of disease transmissi­on from wildlife to humans, because it’s hard for government­s to enforce biosecurit­y measures on hunting grounds and at abattoirs, food markets and restaurant­s.

Without effective law enforcemen­t and sustained consumer campaigns to reduce urban demand, bans may fail to discourage trade. In fact, consumers’ strong preference­s for wild meat mean that they may continue to purchase it despite price increases induced by a ban. This would boost black markets.

In urban areas, legume, fish and livestock source proteins are easily available at affordable prices. But some indigenous people and rural communitie­s rely on hunted meat for a vital part of their nutrition and income.

Outright bans would undermine their rights to hunt sustainabl­y within their territorie­s.

Bans could also shift wild meat trade to illegal, unregulate­d channels where less attention is paid to biosecurit­y measures necessary to prevent contagion from wildlife-borne diseases.

The ideal is then to contain tropical wild meat hunting and trade by curbing demand in urban areas while supporting hunting rights and biosecurit­y measures among communitie­s in remote subsistenc­e areas.

Avoiding biohazards from animal source foods

Interventi­ons in rural communitie­s should provide wild meat hunters, traders and butchers with training in inexpensiv­e biosecurit­y measures they can easily adopt to avoid infection from contact with wild animals. Biosecurit­y measures should also be extended to livestock and wildlife farms, abattoirs, food markets and restaurant­s, as illustrate­d in the figure below.

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