Knowing the Biosphere: Documentation, Specimens, Archives, and Names Reveal Environmental Change and Emerging Pathogens

Eric P. Hoberg, V. Trivellone, J. Cook, J. Dunnum, W. Boeger, Daniel R. Brooks, S. Agosta, J. P. Colella
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

One Health programs and trajectories are now the apparent standard for exploring the occurrence and distribution of emerging pathogens and disease. By definition, One Health has been characterized as a broadly inclusive, collaborative, and transdisciplinary approach with connectivity across local to global scales, which integrates the medical and veterinary community to recognize health outcomes emerging at the environmental nexus for people, animals, plants, and their shared landscapes. One Health has been an incomplete model, conceptually and operationally, focused on reactive and response-based foundations, to limit the impact of emerging pathogens and emerging infectious diseases and, as such, lacks a powerful proactive capacity. A proactive, predictive One Health is necessary, emanating in part from geographically/taxonomically broad and temporally deep biological collections of pathogen-host assemblages. The DAMA protocol (Document, Assess, Monitor, Act), the operational extension of the Stockholm paradigm (SP), accomplishes this task by encompassing holistic and strategic biological sampling of reservoir host assemblages and pathogens at environmental interfaces and more extensively through resurveys, with development of informatics resources digitally linked to physical specimens held in publicly accessible museum biorepositories. Archives of specimens are the foundations for accumulating interrelated archives of information (the baselines against which change can be identified and tracked), with collections serving as fundamental resources for biodiversity informatics under the conceptual evolutionary and ecological umbrella of the SP. A cultural and conceptual transformation is essential among the diverse practitioners in the One Health community, one that recognizes the necessity of placing pathogens in an evolutionary, ecological, and environmental context by integrating specimens and associated informatics into an infrastructure and networks for actionable information. As a community, it is essential to abandon response-based business as usual while looking forward toward proactive transboundary approaches that maximize our conceptual and taxonomic view of diversity across interconnected planetary scales that influence the complexity of pathogen-host interfaces. Evolution, where the past always influences the present and the future, defines our trajectory, as the need for sustained archives that describe the biosphere becomes more acute with each passing day.
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了解生物圈:文件、标本、档案和名称揭示环境变化和新出现的病原体
健康计划和轨迹现在是探索新出现的病原体和疾病的发生和分布的明显标准。根据定义,“同一个健康”的特点是具有广泛的包容性、协作性和跨学科的方法,具有从地方到全球范围的连通性,它整合了医学和兽医界,以识别在人、动物、植物及其共享景观的环境关系中出现的健康结果。“同一个健康”在概念和操作上都是一个不完整的模式,侧重于反应性和基于应对的基础,以限制新出现的病原体和新出现的传染病的影响,因此缺乏强大的主动能力。主动的、可预测的“一体健康”是必要的,它部分源于地理/分类学上广泛和时间上深入的病原体-宿主组合的生物收集。DAMA协议(文件、评估、监测、行动)是斯德哥尔摩范式(SP)的业务延伸,通过在环境界面上对水库宿主组合和病原体进行全面和战略性的生物采样,并通过更广泛的调查,以及与公共博物馆生物储存库中保存的物理标本数字链接的信息资源的开发,完成了这一任务。标本档案是积累相互关联的信息档案(可以确定和跟踪变化的基线)的基础,在SP的概念进化和生态保护伞下,标本收藏是生物多样性信息学的基本资源。在同一健康社区的不同从业者中,文化和概念转变至关重要。通过将标本和相关信息学整合到可操作信息的基础设施和网络中,认识到必须将病原体置于进化、生态和环境背景中。作为一个社区,我们必须像往常一样放弃基于响应的业务,同时展望前瞻性的跨界方法,最大限度地提高我们对影响病原体-宿主界面复杂性的相互关联的行星尺度多样性的概念和分类学观点。过去总是影响现在和未来的进化决定了我们的轨迹,因为对描述生物圈的持续档案的需求日益迫切。
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