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Conservation interventions are being implemented at various spatial scales to reduce the impacts of rising global population and affluence on biodiversity and ecosystems. While the direct impacts of these conservation efforts are considered, the unintended consequences brought about by market feedback effects are often overlooked. Perverse market outcomes could result in reduced or even reversed net impacts of conservation efforts. We develop an economic framework to describe how the intended impacts of conservation interventions could be compromised due to unanticipated reactions to regulations in the market: policies aimed at restricting supply could potentially result in leakage effects through external or unregulated markets. Using this framework, we review how various intervention methods could result in negative feedback impacts on biodiversity, including legal restrictions like protected areas, market-based approaches, and agricultural intensification. Finally, we discuss how conservation management and planning can be designed to ensure the risks of perverse market outcomes are detected, if not overcome, and we address some knowledge gaps that affect our understanding of how market feedbacks vary across spatial and temporal scales, especially with teleconnectedness and increased international trade.
Out of 72 Kaposi's sarcoma patients diagnosed between 1951 and March 1976 at Kuluva Hospital, West Nile District, Uganda, 64 with known co-ordinates were plotted on a map. Sixty-two of these were noted to live at an altitude of 853 metres or more (greater than or equal to 2,800 feet). Twenty-four patients were thought to be still alive and visits were made to their homes. Space-time grouping of four cases was noted on two occasions, although analysis did not reveal statistically significant clustering. A case-control study employing an interview questionnaire with 32 variables was performed on 19 patients and their age- and sex-matched neighbourhood controls, and sera were collected from both groups and from their families for estimation of viral antibody titres. The results demonstrated that cases tended to be post-pubertal males, a high proportion of whom had been bitten by a blood-sucking insect identified as being similar to Haematopota. Both cases and controls had raised antibody levels to cytomegalovirus, but cases obtained their drinking water more commonly from rivers whereas controls tended to use water from springs, boreholes or pipes.
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