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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Online Access: | https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fevo.2018.00127/full |
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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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