2021
DOI: 10.1016/s2542-5196(21)00031-0
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Land use-induced spillover: a call to action to safeguard environmental, animal, and human health

Abstract: The rapid global spread and human health impacts of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, show humanity's vulnerability to zoonotic disease pandemics. Although anthropogenic land use change is known to be the major driver of zoonotic pathogen spillover from wildlife to human populations, the scientific underpinnings of land use-induced zoonotic spillover have rarely been investigated from the landscape perspective. We call for interdisciplinary collaborations to advance knowledge on land use implications… Show more

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Cited by 180 publications
(160 citation statements)
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References 76 publications
(70 reference statements)
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“…Recent pandemics have been a consequence of viral spillover, where a pathogen passes from an animal host to a human through a series of processes that span scales from viral protein structure at 10 −9 m to global transmission at 10 6 m. The hierarchical sequence of spillover starts with an infected reservoir host shedding the pathogen, contact with a recipient host, infection of the recipient host, and then onward transmission within the recipient host population [ 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 ]. This process has been summarized as the infect, shed, spill, spread cascade [ 2 ].…”
Section: Transdisciplinary Science To Identify Drivers Of Pandemicsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recent pandemics have been a consequence of viral spillover, where a pathogen passes from an animal host to a human through a series of processes that span scales from viral protein structure at 10 −9 m to global transmission at 10 6 m. The hierarchical sequence of spillover starts with an infected reservoir host shedding the pathogen, contact with a recipient host, infection of the recipient host, and then onward transmission within the recipient host population [ 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 ]. This process has been summarized as the infect, shed, spill, spread cascade [ 2 ].…”
Section: Transdisciplinary Science To Identify Drivers Of Pandemicsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recent research attest to how unsustainable urbanization-with its knock-on effects on human health and wellbeing-is a critical part of reducing the risk of future pandemics [24][25][26][27]. Human development choices directly impact the natural world, and biodiversity and natural habitats are conditioned on sustainable urbanization and the responsible human consumption of animal products to prevent new, communicable zoonotic diseases.…”
Section: Pandemics and Land Tenure Rightsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite communication about SARS-CoV-2 spillover was haphazard [5][6] , zoonoses received unprecedented attention. In turn, this gave traction to arguments in favor of reconciling economic growth with environmental and sanitary issues [7][8][9] [10] . Moreover, sanitary measures tackling the spread of SARS-CoV-2 curtailed human movements worldwide [11] , and forced billions of people to spend most of their time nearby home [12] .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%