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Implications of Ebola virus disease on wildlife conservation in Nigeria

The recent Ebola Virus Disease outbreak in some West African countries spanning from late 2013 and currently on as of 13th March, 2015 is the most widespread and fatal with human mortality that has surpassed all previous outbreaks. The outbreak has had its toll on conservation of endangered species....

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Autores principales: Egbetade, Adeniyi Olugbenga, Sonibare, Adekayode Olanrewaju, Meseko, Clement Adebajo, Jayeola, Omotola Abiola, Otesile, Ebenezer Babatunde
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The African Field Epidemiology Network 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4695512/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26740844
http://dx.doi.org/10.11694/pamj.supp.2015.22.1.6617
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author Egbetade, Adeniyi Olugbenga
Sonibare, Adekayode Olanrewaju
Meseko, Clement Adebajo
Jayeola, Omotola Abiola
Otesile, Ebenezer Babatunde
author_facet Egbetade, Adeniyi Olugbenga
Sonibare, Adekayode Olanrewaju
Meseko, Clement Adebajo
Jayeola, Omotola Abiola
Otesile, Ebenezer Babatunde
author_sort Egbetade, Adeniyi Olugbenga
collection PubMed
description The recent Ebola Virus Disease outbreak in some West African countries spanning from late 2013 and currently on as of 13th March, 2015 is the most widespread and fatal with human mortality that has surpassed all previous outbreaks. The outbreak has had its toll on conservation of endangered species. This portends danger for the wild fauna of the country if proactive measures are not taken to prepare grounds for evidence- based assertions concerning the involvement of wild species. To this end, there is an urgent need for sweeping census of reserves, national parks and wetlands. As well as the creation of a system involving reportage by sectors like the industries (extractive and construction) including persons and organisations involved with wildlife related activities. This documentation of die offs and unusual events to collaborating institutions, will help in monitoring trends which hitherto would have gone unnoticed. The importance of bats and primates in agriculture and public health via consumption of vermin insects and seed dispersal cannot be over-emphasized. There is the need for caution on the tendencies to destroy indicator species which could be silent pointers to emerging or remerging health and environmental issues. Wildlife resources are still reliably useful and caution is advised in the use of blanket destructive policies like fumigation of caves, indiscriminate culling and poisoned baits to destroy supposedly Ebola Disease Virus wildlife reservoirs. This paper highlights the immediate conservation problems and likely future implications of Ebola saga in Nigeria. It tries to identify the gaps in wildlife researches and makes recommendations for probable workable conservation strategies.
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spelling pubmed-46955122016-01-06 Implications of Ebola virus disease on wildlife conservation in Nigeria Egbetade, Adeniyi Olugbenga Sonibare, Adekayode Olanrewaju Meseko, Clement Adebajo Jayeola, Omotola Abiola Otesile, Ebenezer Babatunde Pan Afr Med J Commentary The recent Ebola Virus Disease outbreak in some West African countries spanning from late 2013 and currently on as of 13th March, 2015 is the most widespread and fatal with human mortality that has surpassed all previous outbreaks. The outbreak has had its toll on conservation of endangered species. This portends danger for the wild fauna of the country if proactive measures are not taken to prepare grounds for evidence- based assertions concerning the involvement of wild species. To this end, there is an urgent need for sweeping census of reserves, national parks and wetlands. As well as the creation of a system involving reportage by sectors like the industries (extractive and construction) including persons and organisations involved with wildlife related activities. This documentation of die offs and unusual events to collaborating institutions, will help in monitoring trends which hitherto would have gone unnoticed. The importance of bats and primates in agriculture and public health via consumption of vermin insects and seed dispersal cannot be over-emphasized. There is the need for caution on the tendencies to destroy indicator species which could be silent pointers to emerging or remerging health and environmental issues. Wildlife resources are still reliably useful and caution is advised in the use of blanket destructive policies like fumigation of caves, indiscriminate culling and poisoned baits to destroy supposedly Ebola Disease Virus wildlife reservoirs. This paper highlights the immediate conservation problems and likely future implications of Ebola saga in Nigeria. It tries to identify the gaps in wildlife researches and makes recommendations for probable workable conservation strategies. The African Field Epidemiology Network 2015-10-11 /pmc/articles/PMC4695512/ /pubmed/26740844 http://dx.doi.org/10.11694/pamj.supp.2015.22.1.6617 Text en © Adeniyi Olugbenga Egbetade et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ The Pan African Medical Journal - ISSN 1937-8688. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Commentary
Egbetade, Adeniyi Olugbenga
Sonibare, Adekayode Olanrewaju
Meseko, Clement Adebajo
Jayeola, Omotola Abiola
Otesile, Ebenezer Babatunde
Implications of Ebola virus disease on wildlife conservation in Nigeria
title Implications of Ebola virus disease on wildlife conservation in Nigeria
title_full Implications of Ebola virus disease on wildlife conservation in Nigeria
title_fullStr Implications of Ebola virus disease on wildlife conservation in Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Implications of Ebola virus disease on wildlife conservation in Nigeria
title_short Implications of Ebola virus disease on wildlife conservation in Nigeria
title_sort implications of ebola virus disease on wildlife conservation in nigeria
topic Commentary
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4695512/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26740844
http://dx.doi.org/10.11694/pamj.supp.2015.22.1.6617
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