Seite - 18 - in Biodiversity and Health in the Face of Climate Change
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Highlights
• Biodiversity, health and climate change have multi-scale and interdependent
links.
• Few studies explicitly connect climate change with biodiversity and physical
health.
• The full extent of human health impacts from biodiversity losses is unclear.
• Action is needed due to climate projections, biodiversity losses and health
demands.
• New research agendas demand ambitious, multi-disciplinary and cross-sector
approaches.
2.1 Introduction
Few would now dispute that important links exist between the natural environment
and human physical health. Nevertheless, despite considerable progress in concep-
tualising and understanding relationships, there is still much to learn about particu-
lar connections, their underlying mechanisms, causality and inter-relationships
(Sandifer etÂ
al. 2015; Ziter 2016; Cameron and Blanusa 2016).
Biodiversity is considered one of the underlying requirements for beneficial
functioning of ecosystems for human health and well-being and is enshrined as such
within policy-focused arenas (Lovell etÂ
al. 2014; Sandifer etÂ
al. 2015). However, the
many interpretations of the term biodiversity, the ways in which it is measured and
its inter-relationships with other factors, including climate, present considerable
challenges for building and testing hypotheses (Schmeller et al. 2018). Where
hypotheses relate to impacts on human health, there are still more elements to con-
sider, including an appreciation of direct and indirect pathways, relevant controls
and the interdependencies between psychological and physiological processes.
Climate change is known to be modifying the natural environment and how it
functions in relation to human health (Bonebrake etÂ
al. 2018). For example, climate
affects ecological states and processes. As climate changes, it affects the function-
ing of ecosystems in terms of the quantity and quality of functions with a beneficial
role for human physical health. Climate change is also affecting the relative balance
of benefits and disbenefits. Furthermore, it has been implicated as one of the mecha-
nisms driving global biodiversity loss, though in fact it is just one of a suite of fac-
tors that remove and degrade associated ecosystems. Data from 63 protected areas
in Germany collected over 29Â years has shown a three-quarters reduction in the
biomass of flying insects, a much higher loss than previously supposed (Hallmann
et al. 2017). However, analysis of climate variables suggested no strong climate
signal to explain the decline. While not all climate-related factors could be dis-
counted, other large-scale factors were also thought to be contributing, in this case
agricultural intensification. Similarly, although climate change leads to health
impacts, such as through climate extremes like high temperatures and climate- related
S. J. Lindley et al.
Biodiversity and Health in the Face of Climate Change
- Titel
- Biodiversity and Health in the Face of Climate Change
- Autoren
- Melissa Marselle
- Jutta Stadler
- Horst Korn
- Katherine Irvine
- Aletta Bonn
- Verlag
- Springer Open
- Datum
- 2019
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-030-02318-8
- Abmessungen
- 15.5 x 24.0 cm
- Seiten
- 508
- Schlagwörter
- Environment, Environmental health, Applied ecology, Climate change, Biodiversity, Public health, Regional planning, Urban planning
- Kategorien
- Naturwissenschaften Umwelt und Klima