Evolving Urban Wildlife Health Surveillance to Intelligence for Pest Mitigation and Monitoring

This paper introduces the concept of harm reduction-based health intelligence as the next step in the evolution of urban wildlife surveillance. There are three reasons to evolve urban wildlife health surveillance: (1) proactive steps to reduce vulnerability to health and safety impacts requires an u...

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Main Author: Craig Stephen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-08-01
Series:Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fevo.2018.00127/full
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spelling doaj-559372849a824a37ac9296701e646c7d2020-11-24T21:19:55ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution2296-701X2018-08-01610.3389/fevo.2018.00127393389Evolving Urban Wildlife Health Surveillance to Intelligence for Pest Mitigation and MonitoringCraig StephenThis paper introduces the concept of harm reduction-based health intelligence as the next step in the evolution of urban wildlife surveillance. There are three reasons to evolve urban wildlife health surveillance: (1) proactive steps to reduce vulnerability to health and safety impacts requires an understanding of environments and social structures as well as of the abundance and distribution of animals or hazards; (2) a hazard-by-hazard approach to surveillance causes management to be reactive rather than proactive; and (3) growing interest in urban wildlife ecology, conservation, and welfare plus the growing recognition of the value of urban wildlife for human well-being requires surveillance to be interested in protecting wildlife health as well as human health. Three strategies to help evolve urban wildlife surveillance to health intelligence are; (1) expand from only tracking a single species or a single threat to also tracking factors that increase the vulnerability of the pests and people in a shared urban setting; (2) be integrative and recognize that multiple concurrent harmful things are affecting people, pests and other species in their shared environments; and (3) develop new collaborative approaches to prevent or mitigate persistent harms from persistent pests without eliminating the pests. This article proposes that harm reduction-based intelligence will better equip city planners and pest managers to identify opportunities to act in advance of significant and concurrent harms to people, infrastructure, and wildlife.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fevo.2018.00127/fullurbanwildlifehealth intelligencesurveillanceharm reduction
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Craig Stephen
spellingShingle Craig Stephen
Evolving Urban Wildlife Health Surveillance to Intelligence for Pest Mitigation and Monitoring
Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution
urban
wildlife
health intelligence
surveillance
harm reduction
author_facet Craig Stephen
author_sort Craig Stephen
title Evolving Urban Wildlife Health Surveillance to Intelligence for Pest Mitigation and Monitoring
title_short Evolving Urban Wildlife Health Surveillance to Intelligence for Pest Mitigation and Monitoring
title_full Evolving Urban Wildlife Health Surveillance to Intelligence for Pest Mitigation and Monitoring
title_fullStr Evolving Urban Wildlife Health Surveillance to Intelligence for Pest Mitigation and Monitoring
title_full_unstemmed Evolving Urban Wildlife Health Surveillance to Intelligence for Pest Mitigation and Monitoring
title_sort evolving urban wildlife health surveillance to intelligence for pest mitigation and monitoring
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution
issn 2296-701X
publishDate 2018-08-01
description This paper introduces the concept of harm reduction-based health intelligence as the next step in the evolution of urban wildlife surveillance. There are three reasons to evolve urban wildlife health surveillance: (1) proactive steps to reduce vulnerability to health and safety impacts requires an understanding of environments and social structures as well as of the abundance and distribution of animals or hazards; (2) a hazard-by-hazard approach to surveillance causes management to be reactive rather than proactive; and (3) growing interest in urban wildlife ecology, conservation, and welfare plus the growing recognition of the value of urban wildlife for human well-being requires surveillance to be interested in protecting wildlife health as well as human health. Three strategies to help evolve urban wildlife surveillance to health intelligence are; (1) expand from only tracking a single species or a single threat to also tracking factors that increase the vulnerability of the pests and people in a shared urban setting; (2) be integrative and recognize that multiple concurrent harmful things are affecting people, pests and other species in their shared environments; and (3) develop new collaborative approaches to prevent or mitigate persistent harms from persistent pests without eliminating the pests. This article proposes that harm reduction-based intelligence will better equip city planners and pest managers to identify opportunities to act in advance of significant and concurrent harms to people, infrastructure, and wildlife.
topic urban
wildlife
health intelligence
surveillance
harm reduction
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fevo.2018.00127/full
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