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E-raamat: Nature of Pandemics: Why Protecting Biodiversity is Key to Human Survival

  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 09-Dec-2025
  • Kirjastus: Pelagic Publishing
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781784276003
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
  • Hind: 19,89 €*
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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 09-Dec-2025
  • Kirjastus: Pelagic Publishing
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781784276003

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Examines the deep connections between human activities, emerging infectious diseases and biodiversity. Drawing on cutting-edge research, it explores how environmental destruction, climate change and globalisation drive pandemics – and how restoring ecosystems can help prevent future outbreaks.



When will the next pandemic arrive? For wildlife, it’s already here.

The Nature of Pandemics explores an unspoken truth: how our actions are driving wildlife pandemics across the world. Highlighting the interconnectedness of human, (non-human) animal and environmental health, it examines historical and contemporary pandemics and considers the importance of conservation and restoration efforts, presenting a compelling case for rethinking how we approach pandemic prevention.

This timely book reframes pandemics as ecological crises that require ecological solutions, unravelling the relationship between biodiversity, ecosystem health and pandemic risk. It reveals how climate change and human activities such as habitat destruction and the wildlife trade contribute to the emergence of infectious diseases, taking the reader through likely candidates for the next pandemic. An in-depth analysis of historical pandemics links past outbreaks, such as the bubonic plague in Eyam, to modern epidemiological challenges. The book also investigates human–wildlife conflict and social equity issues, demonstrating how deforestation and land-use change drive spillovers and how poorer communities disproportionately bear the brunt of outbreaks.

Pandemics pose an escalating global threat, their frequency increasing due to human-induced environmental changes. Prevention is not just down to medical preparedness but also about restoring and protecting biodiversity. By offering solutions such as green prescriptions, ecosystem restoration and sustainable policies, this book sets out an exciting interdisciplinary perspective that merges microbiology, ecology, epidemiology and restoration science.

Introduction: Invisible Foes, Planetary Woes



PART I. THE NATURE OF CONTAGION AND SHIFTING PERSPECTIVES

1. A Trip Down Spillover Lane

2. What Have Vultures Got to Do with It?

3. Why Bats Get Bad Press

4. Biodiversity and the Dilution Effect



PART II. WHICH PATHOGEN WILL CAUSE THE NEXT PANDEMIC?

5. Disease X Its Coming

6. Going Viral

7. Can We ESKAPE this Bacterial Blitzkrieg?

8. A Fungal Frenzy Could This Be The Last of Us?

9. Protozoan Perils: Should We Eradicate Mosquitoes?



PART III. THE NEXT PANDEMIC? FOR WILDLIFE, ITS ALREADY HERE

10. Ring-a-Ring o Roses and Bats with White Noses

11. The Devils Work

12. Its Just the Flu, Right?

13. Spongy Brains and Zombie Deer a Prion Predicament

14. Roots, Shrooms and Webs



PART IV. HOW DO WE ADDRESS THESE LOOMING THREATS?

15. One Health and Healing Nature

16. Green Prescriptions

17. Black-market Biodiversity

18. Sowing the Seeds of Change

19. Vaccinations for Humans and Wildlife?

20. Staying Ahead of the Curve



Conclusion: Looking Back, Moving Forward



Notes

References

Index
Jake M. Robinson is a microbial and restoration ecologist currently living in Australia. He earned a PhD in the environment-microbiome-health axis at the University of Sheffield, UK. His research interests span microbes, ecosystems, social equity issues and strategies to conserve and restore nature. Jake is a core member of the UNFCCC think tank, Resilience Frontiers, specialising in biodiversityhealth connections.





The Nature of Pandemics: Why Protecting Biodiversity is Key to Human Survival is Jakes third book.