Naturaleza y COVID-19: la pandemia, el medio ambiente y el camino a seguir

Autores/as

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54502/msuceva.v2n1a10

Palabras clave:

Biodefensa, Biodiversidad, Cambio climático, Comercialización de fauna silvestre, Enfermedades zoonóticas, Salud

Resumen

La pandemia de la COVID-19 ha traído profundos desafíos sociales, políticos, económicos y ambientales al mundo. El virus puede haber surgido de reservorios de vida silvestre vinculados a la perturbación ambiental, se transmitió a los humanos a través del comercio de vida silvestre y su propagación fue facilitada por la globalización económica. La pandemia llegó en un momento en que los incendios forestales, las altas temperaturas, las inundaciones y las tormentas, amplificaron el sufrimiento humano. Estos desafíos requieren una respuesta poderosa al COVID-19 que aborde el desarrollo social y económico, el cambio climático y la biodiversidad en conjunto, ofreciendo una oportunidad para generar un cambio transformador en la estructura y el funcionamiento de la economía global. Esta biodefensa puede incluir un enfoque de "Una sola salud" en todos los sectores relevantes; un enfoque más ecológico de la agricultura que minimice las emisiones de gases de efecto invernadero y conduzca a dietas más saludables; formas sostenibles de energía; acuerdos ambientales internacionales más efectivos; desarrollo post-COVID que sea equitativo y sostenible; y comercio internacional compatible con la naturaleza. El restaurar y mejorar las áreas protegidas como parte de la dedicación del 50 % de la tierra del planeta a una gestión ambientalmente racional que conserve la biodiversidad también apoyaría la adaptación al cambio climático y limitaría el contacto humano con patógenos zoonóticos. Los vínculos esenciales entre la salud y el bienestar humanos, la biodiversidad y el cambio climático podrían inspirar a una nueva generación de innovadores a brindar soluciones ecológicas que permitan a los humanos vivir en un equilibrio saludable con la naturaleza, lo que conducirá a un futuro resiliente a largo plazo.

 

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Biografía del autor/a

Jeffrey A. McNeely, IUCN, the International Union for Conservation of Nature

Ha estado trabajando en conservación y desarrollo a nivel internacional desde 1968. De mayor relevancia para IPBES, pasó 30 años (1980-2010) en la UICN, la Unión Internacional para la Conservación de la Naturaleza, comenzando como Oficial Ejecutivo de la Comisión de Parques Nacionales de la UICN, luego Director de la División de Programas de la UICN y más tarde Director General Adjunto. En 1988, inició el Programa de Biodiversidad de la UICN, ayudó a redactar el Convenio sobre la Diversidad Biológica y convocó el Foro Global de Biodiversidad que se reunió en varias partes del mundo para permitir que un grupo más amplio contribuya al desarrollo y la implementación del CDB. Fue miembro del Panel Internacional sobre Gestión de Recursos del PNUMA, el Consejo Científico y Técnico del Consejo Internacional de Gobernanza de Riesgos, la Junta de Gobernadores de la Sociedad para la Biología de la Conservación y la Junta de Ecoagriculture Partners (de la cual fue cofundador). White Professor at Large, Universidad de Cornell (2007-2012). En la UICN, trabajó en más de 100 países, desde Australia hasta Zimbabue, en temas que incluyen agricultura sostenible, salud humana, biotecnología, cambio climático, energía, ecosistemas, economía de recursos y varios aspectos de la biodiversidad. Ha escrito o editado más de 40 libros y publicado unos 500 artículos científicos y de divulgación, y es miembro del consejo editorial de ocho revistas científicas.

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Naturaleza y COVID-19

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2022-07-01

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1.
McNeely JA. Naturaleza y COVID-19: la pandemia, el medio ambiente y el camino a seguir. Magna Sci. UCEVA [Internet]. 1 de julio de 2022 [citado 24 de noviembre de 2024];2(1):95-112. Disponible en: http://190.97.80.24/index.php/magnascientia/article/view/41

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Ciencias Ambientales (Environmental Sciences)

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