de Jersey Alix M, Lavers Jennifer L, Zosky Graeme R, Rivers-Auty Jack
Tasmanian School of Medicine, College of Health and Medicine, University of Tasmania, Hobart, Tasmania, 7000, Australia.
Bird Group, The Natural History Museum, Akeman Street, Tring, Hertfordshire, HP23 6AP, United Kingdom; Esperance Tjaltjraak Native Title Aboriginal Corporation, 11A Shelden Road, Esperance, Western Australia, 6450, Australia.
Environ Pollut. 2023 Nov 1;336:122459. doi: 10.1016/j.envpol.2023.122459. Epub 2023 Aug 24.
The global impact of pollution on human and wildlife health is a growing concern. The health impacts of pollution are significant and far-reaching yet poorly understood as no one field of research has the practices and methodologies required to encapsulate the diversity of these consequences. This paper advocates that interdisciplinary research is essential to comprehend the full extent of the impact of pollution. Medical and ecological research play a key role in investigating the health consequences of the pollution crisis, yet the wildlife experience is often neglected. This paper outlines how applying advanced techniques and expertise adapted in medical research to wildlife exposed to pollutants offers a unique perspective to understanding the full diversity of impacts to health. The challenges that impede the progress of this research include the lack of support for interdisciplinary research among funding streams, limitations in field-specific techniques, and a lack of communication between researchers from different disciplines. Of awarded funding from major national research councils across Australia, Europe, and the United States of America, only 0.5% is dedicated to pollution focused research. This is inclusive of laboratory equipment, mitigation strategies, quantification of environmental samples and health consequences research. Of that, 0.03% of funding is awarded to explaining the wildlife experience and documenting the health consequences observed despite being model organisms to environmentally and biologically relevant models for pollution exposure. This calls for a coordinated effort to overcome these hurdles and to promote interdisciplinary research in order to fully comprehend the consequences of pollution exposure and protect the health of humans, wildlife, and the environment. An interdisciplinary approach to this problem is timely given the magnitude of negative health consequences associated with exposure, the number of pollutants already present within the environment and the continual development of new compounds.
污染对人类和野生动物健康的全球影响日益受到关注。污染对健康的影响重大且深远,但人们对此了解甚少,因为没有一个研究领域具备涵盖这些后果多样性所需的实践和方法。本文主张跨学科研究对于全面理解污染影响至关重要。医学和生态学研究在调查污染危机对健康的后果方面发挥着关键作用,但野生动物的情况往往被忽视。本文概述了将医学研究中采用的先进技术和专业知识应用于接触污染物的野生动物,如何为理解对健康影响的全面多样性提供独特视角。阻碍这项研究进展的挑战包括资金流中对跨学科研究缺乏支持、特定领域技术的局限性以及不同学科研究人员之间缺乏沟通。在澳大利亚、欧洲和美国主要国家研究委员会授予的资金中,只有0.5%专门用于聚焦污染的研究。这包括实验室设备、缓解策略、环境样本量化以及健康后果研究。其中,0.03%的资金用于解释野生动物的情况并记录所观察到的健康后果,尽管它们是污染暴露的环境和生物学相关模型的模式生物。这需要共同努力克服这些障碍并促进跨学科研究,以便全面理解污染暴露的后果并保护人类、野生动物和环境的健康。鉴于与暴露相关的负面健康后果的严重程度、环境中已存在的污染物数量以及新化合物的不断开发,采用跨学科方法解决这个问题恰逢其时。