An interdisciplinary approach to improving conservation outcomes for parasites.

IF 5.2 1区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION
Timothy M Brown, Alison M Dunn, Rupert J Quinnell, Ellen Clarke, Andrew A Cunningham, Simon J Goodman
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Parasites represent a significant proportion of Earth's biodiversity and play important roles in the ecology and biology of ecosystems and hosts, making them an important target for conservation. Despite increasing calls to prioritize protection for parasites in the academic literature, they remain undervalued and underrepresented in global biodiversity conservation efforts, not least due to the perception that the interests of parasite and host conservation are opposing and the common misconception that parasites are a threat, rather than a benefit, to conservation. We considered whether taking an interdisciplinary approach to parasite conservation research will generate novel insights and solutions concerning why and how parasite conservation should be practiced for the benefit of parasites, their hosts, ecosystems, and people. We argue that 2 of the main barriers to more widespread parasite conservation are the knowledge gap concerning the role of sociocultural factors affecting the willingness to enact parasite conservation and the lack of a consistent and cohesive philosophical basis for parasite conservation. Possible sociocultural barriers to parasite conservation include misconceptions of the risks posed by parasites, taxonomic bias, differences in conservation values, economic constraints, and technical challenges. The use of social science can generate insights into levels of awareness and support for parasite conservation and improve understanding of how human values and attitudes mediate conservation practices concerning parasites. Such knowledge will have a critical role in addressing sociocultural barriers and improving support for parasite conservation. Issues with the current philosophical basis for parasite conservation include contradictory accounts of which parasites merit conservation, insufficient explanation of how different conservation values apply to parasite biodiversity, and the existence of a false antagonism between host and parasite conservation. Greater engagement with philosophical work on environmental ethics and biological unitization will strengthen existing arguments for parasite conservation and will support conservation decision-making processes.

改善寄生虫保护结果的跨学科方法。
寄生虫占地球生物多样性的很大一部分,在生态系统和宿主的生态学和生物学中发挥着重要作用,是重要的保护目标。尽管在学术文献中越来越多地呼吁优先保护寄生虫,但它们在全球生物多样性保护工作中仍然被低估和代表性不足,尤其是由于人们认为寄生虫和宿主保护的利益是对立的,以及寄生虫对保护是一种威胁而不是益处的普遍误解。我们考虑了采用跨学科方法进行寄生虫保护研究是否会产生关于为什么以及如何实施寄生虫保护以造福寄生虫、它们的宿主、生态系统和人类的新见解和解决方案。我们认为,寄生虫保护的两个主要障碍是关于社会文化因素影响实施寄生虫保护意愿的作用的知识差距,以及缺乏一致和有凝聚力的寄生虫保护哲学基础。对寄生虫保护可能存在的社会文化障碍包括对寄生虫带来的风险的误解、分类偏见、保护价值的差异、经济限制和技术挑战。利用社会科学可以深入了解对寄生虫保护的认识和支持程度,并增进对人类价值观和态度如何调节有关寄生虫的保护实践的理解。这些知识将在解决社会文化障碍和改善对寄生虫保护的支持方面发挥关键作用。目前寄生虫保护的哲学基础问题包括对哪些寄生虫值得保护的矛盾解释,对不同的保护价值如何适用于寄生虫生物多样性的解释不足,以及宿主和寄生虫保护之间存在虚假的对立。更多地参与关于环境伦理和生物统一性的哲学工作将加强现有的关于寄生虫保护的争论,并将支持保护决策过程。
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来源期刊
Conservation Biology
Conservation Biology 环境科学-环境科学
CiteScore
12.70
自引率
3.20%
发文量
175
审稿时长
2 months
期刊介绍: Conservation Biology welcomes submissions that address the science and practice of conserving Earth's biological diversity. We encourage submissions that emphasize issues germane to any of Earth''s ecosystems or geographic regions and that apply diverse approaches to analyses and problem solving. Nevertheless, manuscripts with relevance to conservation that transcend the particular ecosystem, species, or situation described will be prioritized for publication.
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