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Climate Change and Human Health Literature Portal Pathogens of domestic and free-ranging ungulates: Global climate change in temperate to boreal latitudes across North America

Climate Change and Human Health Literature Portal

Hoberg EP, Polley L, Jenkins EJ, Kutz SJ
2008
Revue Scientifique Et Technique / Office International Des éPizooties. 27 (2): 511-528

In North America broad-based research networks explore the interaction of vertebrates, their characteristic arrays of pathogens and emergent disease. A diversity of programmes address the impact of environmental change on animal health, zoonoses, and human health, but as yet no comprehensive framework or strategy has emerged to develop and implement policy and planning. In a regime of climate change and ecological perturbation, the need to document and understand the health, agricultural, societal and economic impact of pathogens and emerging infectious disease is urgent. An integrated and proactive planning process linking national and international resources can lead to informed predictions aboutthe impact of environmental change and can identify pathways for potential management and mitigation. An effective and comprehensive programme will have components for establishing priorities, developing primary data for faunal structure and biodiversity, a capacity for monitoring and surveillance (including scanning and targeted activities), and linkage to historical and contemporary baselines (against which to assess change) established through archival biological collections. Field and laboratory studies are also necessary to determine developmental thresholds, tolerances and tipping points for many pathogens to establish a context for recognising current constraints and future perturbation, and to explore factors that promote emergence for a variety of pathogens, vectors and pest species. Predictive modelling and risk assessment utilising a range of scenarios for climate change is a final step in this multidisciplinary process.

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Resource Description

    Ecosystem Change
    General Geographic Feature
    Non-United States, United States
    • Non-United States, United States: Non-U.S. North America
    Infectious Disease
    • Infectious Disease: General Infectious Disease
    Research Article, Review Article
    Adaptation
    • Adaptation: Adaptation Co-Benefit/Co-Harm, Early Warning System, Vulnerability Assessment
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