Cargando…

Environmental Change and Zoonotic Disease Risk at Human-Macaque Interfaces in Bangladesh

Anthropogenic land-use changes increase the frequency of interactions and habitat overlap between humans and macaques which play an important role in zoonotic disease transmission. This exploratory qualitative study aimed to examine connections between land-use change and macaque-human interactions...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Shano, Shahanaj, Islam, Ariful, Hagan, Emily, Rostal, Melinda K., Martinez, Stephanie, Al Shakil, Abdullah, Hasan, Moushumi, Francisco, Leilani, Husain, Mushtuq M., Rahman, Mahmudur, Flora, Meerjady S., Miller, Maureen, Daszak, Peter, Epstein, Jonathan H.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer US 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8573309/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34748109
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10393-021-01565-5
_version_ 1784595396074405888
author Shano, Shahanaj
Islam, Ariful
Hagan, Emily
Rostal, Melinda K.
Martinez, Stephanie
Al Shakil, Abdullah
Hasan, Moushumi
Francisco, Leilani
Husain, Mushtuq M.
Rahman, Mahmudur
Flora, Meerjady S.
Miller, Maureen
Daszak, Peter
Epstein, Jonathan H.
author_facet Shano, Shahanaj
Islam, Ariful
Hagan, Emily
Rostal, Melinda K.
Martinez, Stephanie
Al Shakil, Abdullah
Hasan, Moushumi
Francisco, Leilani
Husain, Mushtuq M.
Rahman, Mahmudur
Flora, Meerjady S.
Miller, Maureen
Daszak, Peter
Epstein, Jonathan H.
author_sort Shano, Shahanaj
collection PubMed
description Anthropogenic land-use changes increase the frequency of interactions and habitat overlap between humans and macaques which play an important role in zoonotic disease transmission. This exploratory qualitative study aimed to examine connections between land-use change and macaque-human interactions and assess the chance of zoonotic disease transmission. We conducted ethnographic interviews and focus group discussions in Old Dhaka, Madaripur, and Chandpur, Bangladesh. Participants reported significant anthropogenic landscape transformations leading to increased human-macaque contact in the study areas. Participants also reported that all three sites underwent substantial landscape alteration from natural or agricultural land to a human-altered environment with roads, commercial, and residential buildings. Participants noted that the disappearance of forestland appeared to increase the macaque dependence on backyard fruit trees. Where rivers and ponds were filled to support local construction, macaques were also observed as becoming more dependent upon human water sources. These changed may help expanding the macaques' foraging areas, and they appear to be invading new areas where people are not culturally habituated to living with them. In response, many residents reported reacting aggressively toward the macaques, which they believed led to more bites and scratches. However, other respondents accepted the presence of macaques around their homes. Few participants considered macaques to be a source of disease transmission. This study revealed that local environmental changes, deforestation, urban expansion, construction, and water bodies' disappearance are linked to increasing human-macaque interactions. Understanding these interactions is critical to develop successful mitigation interventions at interfaces with a high risk for viral disease spillover.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8573309
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher Springer US
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-85733092021-11-08 Environmental Change and Zoonotic Disease Risk at Human-Macaque Interfaces in Bangladesh Shano, Shahanaj Islam, Ariful Hagan, Emily Rostal, Melinda K. Martinez, Stephanie Al Shakil, Abdullah Hasan, Moushumi Francisco, Leilani Husain, Mushtuq M. Rahman, Mahmudur Flora, Meerjady S. Miller, Maureen Daszak, Peter Epstein, Jonathan H. Ecohealth Original Contribution Anthropogenic land-use changes increase the frequency of interactions and habitat overlap between humans and macaques which play an important role in zoonotic disease transmission. This exploratory qualitative study aimed to examine connections between land-use change and macaque-human interactions and assess the chance of zoonotic disease transmission. We conducted ethnographic interviews and focus group discussions in Old Dhaka, Madaripur, and Chandpur, Bangladesh. Participants reported significant anthropogenic landscape transformations leading to increased human-macaque contact in the study areas. Participants also reported that all three sites underwent substantial landscape alteration from natural or agricultural land to a human-altered environment with roads, commercial, and residential buildings. Participants noted that the disappearance of forestland appeared to increase the macaque dependence on backyard fruit trees. Where rivers and ponds were filled to support local construction, macaques were also observed as becoming more dependent upon human water sources. These changed may help expanding the macaques' foraging areas, and they appear to be invading new areas where people are not culturally habituated to living with them. In response, many residents reported reacting aggressively toward the macaques, which they believed led to more bites and scratches. However, other respondents accepted the presence of macaques around their homes. Few participants considered macaques to be a source of disease transmission. This study revealed that local environmental changes, deforestation, urban expansion, construction, and water bodies' disappearance are linked to increasing human-macaque interactions. Understanding these interactions is critical to develop successful mitigation interventions at interfaces with a high risk for viral disease spillover. Springer US 2021-11-08 2021 /pmc/articles/PMC8573309/ /pubmed/34748109 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10393-021-01565-5 Text en © EcoHealth Alliance 2021 This article is made available via the PMC Open Access Subset for unrestricted research re-use and secondary analysis in any form or by any means with acknowledgement of the original source. These permissions are granted for the duration of the World Health Organization (WHO) declaration of COVID-19 as a global pandemic.
spellingShingle Original Contribution
Shano, Shahanaj
Islam, Ariful
Hagan, Emily
Rostal, Melinda K.
Martinez, Stephanie
Al Shakil, Abdullah
Hasan, Moushumi
Francisco, Leilani
Husain, Mushtuq M.
Rahman, Mahmudur
Flora, Meerjady S.
Miller, Maureen
Daszak, Peter
Epstein, Jonathan H.
Environmental Change and Zoonotic Disease Risk at Human-Macaque Interfaces in Bangladesh
title Environmental Change and Zoonotic Disease Risk at Human-Macaque Interfaces in Bangladesh
title_full Environmental Change and Zoonotic Disease Risk at Human-Macaque Interfaces in Bangladesh
title_fullStr Environmental Change and Zoonotic Disease Risk at Human-Macaque Interfaces in Bangladesh
title_full_unstemmed Environmental Change and Zoonotic Disease Risk at Human-Macaque Interfaces in Bangladesh
title_short Environmental Change and Zoonotic Disease Risk at Human-Macaque Interfaces in Bangladesh
title_sort environmental change and zoonotic disease risk at human-macaque interfaces in bangladesh
topic Original Contribution
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8573309/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34748109
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10393-021-01565-5
work_keys_str_mv AT shanoshahanaj environmentalchangeandzoonoticdiseaseriskathumanmacaqueinterfacesinbangladesh
AT islamariful environmentalchangeandzoonoticdiseaseriskathumanmacaqueinterfacesinbangladesh
AT haganemily environmentalchangeandzoonoticdiseaseriskathumanmacaqueinterfacesinbangladesh
AT rostalmelindak environmentalchangeandzoonoticdiseaseriskathumanmacaqueinterfacesinbangladesh
AT martinezstephanie environmentalchangeandzoonoticdiseaseriskathumanmacaqueinterfacesinbangladesh
AT alshakilabdullah environmentalchangeandzoonoticdiseaseriskathumanmacaqueinterfacesinbangladesh
AT hasanmoushumi environmentalchangeandzoonoticdiseaseriskathumanmacaqueinterfacesinbangladesh
AT franciscoleilani environmentalchangeandzoonoticdiseaseriskathumanmacaqueinterfacesinbangladesh
AT husainmushtuqm environmentalchangeandzoonoticdiseaseriskathumanmacaqueinterfacesinbangladesh
AT rahmanmahmudur environmentalchangeandzoonoticdiseaseriskathumanmacaqueinterfacesinbangladesh
AT florameerjadys environmentalchangeandzoonoticdiseaseriskathumanmacaqueinterfacesinbangladesh
AT millermaureen environmentalchangeandzoonoticdiseaseriskathumanmacaqueinterfacesinbangladesh
AT daszakpeter environmentalchangeandzoonoticdiseaseriskathumanmacaqueinterfacesinbangladesh
AT epsteinjonathanh environmentalchangeandzoonoticdiseaseriskathumanmacaqueinterfacesinbangladesh