Viewing Emerging Human Infectious Epidemics through the Lens of Invasion Biology

Abstract Invasion biology examines species originated elsewhere and moved with the help of humans, and those species’ impacts on biodiversity, ecosystem services, and human well-being. In a globalized world, the emergence and spread of many human infectious pathogens are quintessential biological in...

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Veröffentlicht in:Bioscience 2021-07, Vol.71 (7), p.722-740
Hauptverfasser: VilÀ, Montserrat, Dunn, Alison M, Essl, Franz, GÓmez-DÍaz, Elena, Hulme, Philip E, Jeschke, Jonathan M, NÚÑez, MartÍn A, Ostfeld, Richard S, Pauchard, AnÍbal, Ricciardi, Anthony, Gallardo, Belinda
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container_end_page 740
container_issue 7
container_start_page 722
container_title Bioscience
container_volume 71
creator VilÀ, Montserrat
Dunn, Alison M
Essl, Franz
GÓmez-DÍaz, Elena
Hulme, Philip E
Jeschke, Jonathan M
NÚÑez, MartÍn A
Ostfeld, Richard S
Pauchard, AnÍbal
Ricciardi, Anthony
Gallardo, Belinda
description Abstract Invasion biology examines species originated elsewhere and moved with the help of humans, and those species’ impacts on biodiversity, ecosystem services, and human well-being. In a globalized world, the emergence and spread of many human infectious pathogens are quintessential biological invasion events. Some macroscopic invasive species themselves contribute to the emergence and transmission of human infectious agents. We review conceptual parallels and differences between human epidemics and biological invasions by animals and plants. Fundamental concepts in invasion biology regarding the interplay of propagule pressure, species traits, biotic interactions, eco-evolutionary experience, and ecosystem disturbances can help to explain transitions between stages of epidemic spread. As a result, many forecasting and management tools used to address epidemics could be applied to biological invasions and vice versa. Therefore, we advocate for increasing cross-fertilization between the two disciplines to improve prediction, prevention, treatment, and mitigation of invasive species and infectious disease outbreaks, including pandemics.
doi_str_mv 10.1093/biosci/biab047
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In a globalized world, the emergence and spread of many human infectious pathogens are quintessential biological invasion events. Some macroscopic invasive species themselves contribute to the emergence and transmission of human infectious agents. We review conceptual parallels and differences between human epidemics and biological invasions by animals and plants. Fundamental concepts in invasion biology regarding the interplay of propagule pressure, species traits, biotic interactions, eco-evolutionary experience, and ecosystem disturbances can help to explain transitions between stages of epidemic spread. As a result, many forecasting and management tools used to address epidemics could be applied to biological invasions and vice versa. 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source Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current); Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Biodiversity
Biology
Cross-fertilization
Ecosystem biology
Ecosystem disturbance
Ecosystem services
Epidemics
Fertilization
Infectious diseases
Introduced species
Invasions
Invasive species
Management tools
Nonnative species
Pandemics
Well being
title Viewing Emerging Human Infectious Epidemics through the Lens of Invasion Biology
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