LEADER 06829nam 2200433 450 001 9910583395103321 005 20230120002749.0 010 $a0-08-101167-9 010 $a1-78548-115-0 035 $a(CKB)4100000001115594 035 $a(MiAaPQ)EBC5162803 035 $a(EXLCZ)994100000001115594 100 $a20171223h20182018 uy 0 101 0 $aeng 135 $aurcnu|||||||| 181 $2rdacontent 182 $2rdamedia 183 $2rdacarrier 200 10$aBiodiversity and health $elinking life, ecosystems, societies /$fSerge Morand, Claire Lajaunie 210 1$aLondon, England :$cISTE Press :$cElsevier,$d2018. 210 4$dİ2018 215 $a1 online resource (302 pages) $cillustrations 225 0 $aBiodiversity and Health 320 $aIncludes bibliographical references at the end of each chapters and index. 327 $aMachine generated contents note:$gch. 1$tA Brief History on the Links between Health and Biodiversity --$g1.1.$tIntroduction --$g1.2.$tMillennium Development Goals for Ecosystem Services --$g1.3.$tFrom environmental health to "one health" --$g1.4.$tFormerly recognized links --$gch. 2$tBiodiversity, Cultural Diversity and Infectious Diseases --$g2.1.$tIntroduction --$g2.2.$tDistribution of infectious diseases: links to biological diversity and cultural diversity --$g2.3.$tOrigins of parasitic and infectious diseases in non-human primates --$g2.4.$tThe first epidemiological transition: "Out of Africa" human migration --$g2.5.$tGenetic diversity and human migration --$g2.6.$tAnimal domestication --$g2.7.$tThe beginning of globalization --$g2.8.$tConclusion --$gch. 3$tLoss of Biological Diversity and Emergence of Infectious Diseases --$g3.1.$tIntroduction --$g3.2.$tEpidemiology of infectious diseases --$g3.3.$tReservoirs of zoonotic infectious diseases --$g3.4.$tEmerging infectious diseases and the biodiversity crisis --$g3.5.$tMechanisms of emergence through habitat modification --$g3.6.$tMechanisms of emergence through community modification --$g3.7.$tGenetic diversity of hosts and transmission of infectious diseases --$g3.8.$tConclusion --$gch. 4$tLoss of Biodiversity and Emergence of Non-infectious Diseases --$g4.1.$tIntroduction --$g4.2.$tDiversity, host parasite co-evolution and the immune system --$g4.3.$tThe hygiene hypothesis and the parasitic diversity crisis --$g4.4.$tThe "farm" hypothesis: biological diversity and allergies --$g4.5.$tConclusion: towards an evolving medicine --$gch. 5$tAnthropogenic Stress --$g5.1.$tIntroduction: a planet dominated by humans and their animals --$g5.2.$tImpact of urbanization and road network --$g5.3.$tPhysiology of stress and health --$g5.4.$tEffects of phytosanitation and biocides --$g5.5.$tEndocrine disrupters --$g5.6.$tAntibiotics --$g5.7.$tConclusion --$gch. 6$tBiodiversity Response --$g6.1.$tIntroduction: how life has adapted --$g6.2.$tAnthropization and synanthropy --$g6.3.$tResistance to insecticides --$g6.4.$tResistance to genetically modified plants --$g6.5.$tResistance to antiparasitic drugs: the example of artemisinin --$g6.6.$tResistance to antibiotics --$g6.7.$tEvolution of virulence --$g6.8.$tNew biotechnologies and evolution of resistance: Wolbachia, CRISPR-Cas 9 --$g6.9.$tEcological and evolutionary engineering --$g6.9.1.$tManagement of resistance to Bt transgenic plants --$g6.9.2.$tManaging antimicrobial resistance --$g6.9.3.$tCRISPR-Cas9 technologies --$g6.10.$tConclusion --$gch. 7$tAnimal and Human Pharmacopoeias --$g7.1.$tIntroduction --$g7.2.$tThe diversity of plant secondary metabolites --$g7.3.$tOrigin of self-medication in animals and hominids --$g7.4.$tEthnobotany and traditional medicine --$g7.5.$tBioprospecting, biopiracy and patents --$g7.6.$tConservation biology and traditional pharmacopoeia --$g7.7.$tLoss of biodiversity and knowledge --$g7.8.$tConclusion --$gch. 8$tWell-being --$g8.1.$tIntroduction --$g8.2.$tObjectivity and subjectivity of well-being --$g8.3.$tPsychology and the natural environment --$g8.4.$tEvolutionary psychology and well-being --$g8.5.$tTheories of habitat and visual refuge, topophilia and biophilia --$g8.6.$tImplications and applications of biophilia --$g8.7.$tTraditional knowledge and well-being --$g8.8.$tConclusion --$gch. 9$tEcosystem Services for Health and Biodiversity --$g9.1.$tIntroduction --$g9.2.$tEnvironmental impacts and well-being --$g9.3.$tHealth of ecosystems --$g9.4.$tEcosystem services --$g9.5.$tEcosystem services and health --$g9.6.$tEcosystem disservices and health --$g9.7.$tCompromise between services, economic development and health --$g9.8.$tConclusion --$gch. 10$tBiodiversity and Health Scenarios --$g10.1.$tIntroduction --$g10.2.$tProspects and global scenarios --$g10.2.1.$tDemography --$g10.2.2.$tAgriculture and livestock --$g10.2.3.$tClimate change --$g10.2.4.$tBiodiversity --$g10.2.5.$tHuman health --$g10.2.6.$tAnimal health --$g10.3.$tWorst-case scenarios --$g10.3.1.$tThresholds and tipping points, planetary limits --$g10.3.2.$tCollapse --$g10.4.$tGlobal risks and "preparedness" for the worst --$g10.5.$tTowards integrated scenarios --$g10.6.$tObservations and observatories --$g10.7.$tExperts and representation of knowledge --$g10.8.$tConclusion: scenarios for research and governance --$gch. 11$tGovernance of Biodiversity and Health --$g11.1.$tIntroduction --$g11.2.$tInternational governance of biodiversity and health --$g11.3.$tRegional challenges --$g11.4.$tImplementation at the national level --$gch. 12$tEthics, Values and Responsibilities --$g12.1.$tIntroduction --$g12.2.$tPluralism of scientific approaches --$g12.3.$tSome definitions --$g12.4.$tHumanist and human health ethics --$g12.5.$tAnimal and animal health ethics --$g12.6.$tEnvironmental ethics --$g12.7.$tApplied and global environmental ethics --$g12.8.$tEthics of foresight and scenarios --$g12.9.$tConfronting the ethics network --$g12.10.$tNecessity of pluralism of ethics --$g12.11.$tConclusion --$gch. 13$tThe Role of Law, Justice and Scientific Knowledge in Health and Biodiversity --$g13.1.$tIntroduction --$g13.2.$tComplexity, scientific knowledge and informing political decisions --$g13.3.$tFor a law that is in line with reality: difficulty in implementing the principles of transparency, accountability and participation --$g13.4.$tScientific knowledge used by citizens for environmental justice --$g13.5.$tHuman rights and the right to science? Environmental and health challenges. 606 $aBiodiversity 606 $aBiodiversity$vCongresses 615 0$aBiodiversity. 615 0$aBiodiversity 676 $a333.95 700 $aMorand$b S.$0857189 702 $aLajaunie$b Claire 801 0$bMiAaPQ 801 1$bMiAaPQ 801 2$bMiAaPQ 906 $aBOOK 912 $a9910583395103321 996 $aBiodiversity and health$92158514 997 $aUNINA