Wildlife Conservation with The Impact of Human Activities
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.71320/bcs.0006Keywords:
Wildlife, human impact, conservationAbstract
The continuing devastation of natural habitats is still one of the most important and acute challenges that wildlife conservation programs are presented with in the contemporary world. The insistent encroachment of agricultural lands, the irrepressible expansion of urban areas, and the widespread deforestation for various uses, including logging and mining activities, has all contributed heavily to the destruction and subdivision of critical biotas that are necessary for sustaining a rich diversity of forms of life. With the human population expanding continuously at unprecedented levels, it is almost inevitable that the rate of contacts between humans and a rich diversity of animal forms increases proportionally. This increased contact between humans and a large number of animal forms causes a substantial increase in rates of disease transmission among different animal populations that also brings with it the potential for those diseases to get transmitted to humans. Therefore, this highlights disease monitoring and management as important and priority domains of wildlife conservation programs that are necessary for containing and reducing risks posed by these diseases. Early detection of outbreaks of emergent diseases by properly organized and effective monitoring programs can be capable of having a pivotal role to play in preventing future epidemics by allowing for instantaneous and effective responses to be taken everywhere and anywhere that they are required.
References
Young, S., 2003. Contemporary issues of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora and the debate over sustainable use. Colo J Int Environ Law Policy 14.
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Copyright © Bio Communications. This article is published under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) license. Under this license, you are free to share (copy and redistribute) this material in any medium or format for non-commercial purposes, provided you give appropriate credit to the author(s) and the journal. No modifications or adaptations of the material are permitted. The copyright for this article remains with the journal Bio Communications.