提高生物多样性公民科学对健康和福祉的益处

IF 3.3 3区 环境科学与生态学 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES Frontiers in Environmental Science Pub Date : 2024-08-22 DOI:10.3389/fenvs.2024.1444161
Rachel R. Y. Oh, Richard A. Fuller, Birte Peters, Angela J. Dean, Nancy A. Pachana, Corey T. Callaghan, Nicola J. Sockhill, Aletta Bonn, Andres F. Suarez-Castro
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引用次数: 0

摘要

参与生物多样性公民科学计划可为个人和社区带来健康和福利。然而,很少有生物多样性公民科学计划明确将优化健康和福祉作为潜在的共同利益,导致错失生物多样性保护和人类健康的机会。在这一视角中,我们采用剂量-反应方法来讨论决定参与生物多样性公民科学计划如何与促进健康和福利的机会相匹配的因素。我们考虑了与自然接触的持续时间和频率、与自然的互动强度以及个人之间的互动强度等相关方面,以强调各种公民科学活动对健康的不同益处。为了说明这些方面,我们使用了来自七个英语和非英语国家的 95 个公民科学计划样本,并展示了精心的项目设计如何能够提高为参与者带来健康和幸福益处的潜力。最后,我们考虑了如何提高公民科学活动对健康和福祉的益处,并提出了潜在的研究途径,以评估这些活动对生物多样性和人类健康的益处之间的协同作用和权衡。
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Enhancing the health and wellbeing benefits of biodiversity citizen science
Engagement in biodiversity citizen science initiatives can confer health and wellbeing benefits to individuals and communities. Yet, few biodiversity citizen science initiatives are explicitly planned to optimize health and wellbeing as a potential co-benefit, leading to missed opportunities for biodiversity conservation and human health. In this perspective, we use a dose-response approach to discuss the components that determine how engagement in biodiversity citizen science initiatives map onto opportunities to foster health and wellbeing benefits. We considered aspects related to the duration and frequency of contact with nature, and the intensity of interactions with nature and between individuals to highlight the different health benefits across the variety of citizen science initiatives. To illustrate these aspects, we use a sample of 95 citizen science initiatives from seven English and non-English-speaking countries and show how careful project design can increase the potential to confer health and wellbeing benefits to participants. We conclude with considerations on how to enhance the health and wellbeing benefits from citizen science initiatives, and propose potential research avenues to assess synergies and trade-offs between benefits to biodiversity and human health from these initiatives.
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来源期刊
Frontiers in Environmental Science
Frontiers in Environmental Science Environmental Science-General Environmental Science
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
8.70%
发文量
2276
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊介绍: Our natural world is experiencing a state of rapid change unprecedented in the presence of humans. The changes affect virtually all physical, chemical and biological systems on Earth. The interaction of these systems leads to tipping points, feedbacks and amplification of effects. In virtually all cases, the causes of environmental change can be traced to human activity through either direct interventions as a consequence of pollution, or through global warming from greenhouse case emissions. Well-formulated and internationally-relevant policies to mitigate the change, or adapt to the consequences, that will ensure our ability to thrive in the coming decades are badly needed. Without proper understanding of the processes involved, and deep understanding of the likely impacts of bad decisions or inaction, the security of food, water and energy is a risk. Left unchecked shortages of these basic commodities will lead to migration, global geopolitical tension and conflict. This represents the major challenge of our time. We are the first generation to appreciate the problem and we will be judged in future by our ability to determine and take the action necessary. Appropriate knowledge of the condition of our natural world, appreciation of the changes occurring, and predictions of how the future will develop are requisite to the definition and implementation of solutions. Frontiers in Environmental Science publishes research at the cutting edge of knowledge of our natural world and its various intersections with society. It bridges between the identification and measurement of change, comprehension of the processes responsible, and the measures needed to reduce their impact. Its aim is to assist the formulation of policies, by offering sound scientific evidence on environmental science, that will lead to a more inhabitable and sustainable world for the generations to come.
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