植物健康及其在 "一个健康 "框架内对食品安全和保障的影响:四个案例研究。

One Health Outlook Pub Date : 2021-03-31 eCollection Date: 2021-01-01 DOI:10.1186/s42522-021-00038-7
David M Rizzo, Maureen Lichtveld, Jonna A K Mazet, Eri Togami, Sally A Miller
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摘要

虽然健康的植物对人类和动物的健康至关重要,但在 "一体健康 "文献中,植物健康却常常被忽视。植物为人类提供了 80% 以上的食物,也是牲畜的主要营养来源。然而,植物病虫害常常威胁着人类和动物食用植物的可用性和安全性。全球重要主粮作物的产量损失可达 30%,粮食产量损失达数千亿美元。为了展示植物与公共卫生之间复杂的相互关系,我们介绍了四个与食品安全和/或保障直接相关的植物健康问题案例研究,以及 "同一健康 "方法如何影响对这些问题的认识和缓解。第一个案例研究是非洲东部和中部的香蕉黄单胞菌枯萎病,植物病原体会通过减产和植物死亡影响粮食供应,进而影响粮食安全。案例研究 2、3 和 4 强调了植物性食品的安全性也可能受到影响的方式。案例研究 2 描述了产生霉菌毒素的植物定殖真菌在人类和动物疾病中的作用,并探讨了从肯尼亚黄曲霉毒素病爆发中吸取的教训。案例研究 3 以北美莴苣大肠杆菌污染为例,说明植物也可能成为人类病原体的传播媒介。最后,案例研究 4 重点关注苏里南杀虫剂的使用,这是一个与粮食安全密切相关的复杂问题,既要保护农作物免受病虫害,又要防止滥用杀虫剂造成食品安全问题。这些来自世界各地低收入到高收入国家的案例表明,需要跨学科团队来解决复杂的植物健康问题。通过这些案例研究,我们探讨了在减轻对公众健康的负面影响和确保健康公平方面所面临的挑战和机遇。为了更好地应对植物相关病原体和害虫的出现和传播,我们需要在监测技术以及从数据收集、分析、风险评估、报告到信息共享的功能性简化工作流程方面取得进步。我们的案例研究表明,在应对可能成为公共卫生突发事件的植物健康问题时,合作非常重要,"同一健康 "方法在确保全球人口的食品安全和粮食安全方面也很有价值。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Plant health and its effects on food safety and security in a One Health framework: four case studies.

Although healthy plants are vital to human and animal health, plant health is often overlooked in the One Health literature. Plants provide over 80% of the food consumed by humans and are the primary source of nutrition for livestock. However, plant diseases and pests often threaten the availability and safety of plants for human and animal consumption. Global yield losses of important staple crops can range up to 30% and hundreds of billions of dollars in lost food production. To demonstrate the complex interrelationships between plants and public health, we present four case studies on plant health issues directly tied to food safety and/or security, and how a One Health approach influences the perception and mitigation of these issues. Plant pathogens affect food availability and consequently food security through reductions in yield and plant mortality as shown through the first case study of banana Xanthomonas wilt in East and Central Africa. Case studies 2, 3 and 4 highlight ways in which the safety of plant-based foods can also be compromised. Case study 2 describes the role of mycotoxin-producing plant-colonizing fungi in human and animal disease and examines lessons learned from outbreaks of aflatoxicosis in Kenya. Plants may also serve as vectors of human pathogens as seen in case study 3, with an example of Escherichia coli (E. coli) contamination of lettuce in North America. Finally, case study 4 focuses on the use of pesticides in Suriname, a complex issue intimately tied to food security though protection of crops from diseases and pests, while also a food safety issue through misuse. These cases from around the world in low to high income countries point to the need for interdisciplinary teams to solve complex plant health problems. Through these case studies, we examine challenges and opportunities moving forward for mitigating negative public health consequences and ensuring health equity. Advances in surveillance technology and functional and streamlined workflow, from data collection, analyses, risk assessment, reporting, and information sharing are needed to improve the response to emergence and spread of plant-related pathogens and pests. Our case studies point to the importance of collaboration in responses to plant health issues that may become public health emergencies and the value of the One Health approach in ensuring food safety and food security for the global population.

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