About this Research Topic
The domestic-wildlife interface is often perceived as a source of conflict in which environmentalist and anthropocentric views clash. In many developed countries, the presence of wildlife is considered a direct threat for human activities such as livestock farming, risking economic losses, disease transmission, crop damages to agriculture, vehicle collisions, among others. However, at the same time, populations of some wild species are promoted and exploited for recreational purposes (i.e., sport hunting), food production or other sources of income. In the tropics, the conflicts often emerge from the progressive encroaching of natural areas through deforestation, land fragmentation and urbanization, that strongly impact biodiversity, reduce the number of species and habitats, and create new scenarios for the emergence and spread of diseases. In better preserved contexts with a reduced human influence, the main problems are linked with human-wildlife conflicts: attacks of large carnivores, livestock predation as well as crop damages by herbivores. In addition, zoonotic risks are also frequent due to the manipulation of natural resources for food and the overlapping habitats of humans, wildlife, and domestic animals.
The main goal of this Research Topic is to promote integrative research at domestic-wildlife interfaces over the world in order to characterise and understand their specific eco-epidemiological drivers to support subsequent interventions and strategies for disease management and control. Therefore, the main areas to be included regarding the different domestic-wildlife interfaces (but not exclusively limited to) are:
Socioeconomic and biogeographic approaches to characterise the interface.
Ecologic and anthropogenic drivers of interactions.
Eco-epidemiological surveys of pathogens from a “One Health” perspective.
Conflicts between wildlife, domestic animals and humans that can have an impact on disease transmission and spread.
Management practices: interventions and control measures to reduce disease spread.
Keywords: Conflicts, Control, Domestic animals, Ecology, Epidemiology, Interface, Interventions, Management, Wildlife
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