sciencenewsnet.in

Fix up Earth to exit COVID-19: Critical link between environment, pandemics

Ecosystem restoration can assist in COVID-19 recovery if it is closely integrated with socioeconomic, health and environmental policies, scientists say in a new article in The Lancet Planetary Health.

The repair of ecosystems as a core public health intervention can reduce the risk of infection and play an integral role in the long-term rehabilitation from COVID-19, which has so far claimed up to 15 million lives globally through direct and indirect infection (World Health Organization, 2020-21).

“Make no mistake. The loss of functional and resilient ecosystems around the world is linked to the global pandemic and the fundamentals of health and socioeconomic recovery,” says lead researcher Flinders University ecologist Dr Martin Breed. “The long-term health effects and economic recovery remain major concerns.”

Without effective and large-scale restoration efforts, up to 95% of land on Earth will be degraded by 2050.

The 2020s have been declared the UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration to reflect the growing urgency and scale required to save ecosystems and landscapes.

First author, Flinders University academic and ecologist Dr Jake Robinson, says the new Lancet article demonstrates how ecosystem restoration has rarely been considered an integral part of the global response to COVID-19, even though the pandemic has exposed socioeconomic disparities and weaknesses in health systems worldwide. 

“The next decade will be crucial for humanity’s recovery from the pandemic and for ecosystem repair,” says Dr Robinson, who us currently based in the UK.

“Urgent policy action is required at all levels – from local government to intergovernmental platforms – to transform the social, economic and financial models towards a simultaneous healthy recovery of both ecosystems and humanity.”

The researchers from Australia, the UK and US raise the following points:

The article, ‘Ecosystem restoration is integral to humanity’s recovery from COVID-19’ (2022), by Jake M Robinson, James Aronson, Christopher B Daniels, Neva Goodwin, Craig Liddicoat, Laura Orlando, David Phillips, Jessica Stanhope, Philip Weinstein, Adam T Cross and Martin F Breed has been published in The Lancet – Planetary Health DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/S2542-5196(22)00171-1

Acknowledgements: The project was funded by the Australia Research Council Linkage grants.

###