农业
牲畜
畜牧业
业务
动物健康
传染病(医学专业)
动物生产
自然资源经济学
森林砍伐(计算机科学)
精耕细作
疾病
生物技术
环境卫生
兽医学
生物
医学
生态学
经济
动物科学
病理
程序设计语言
计算机科学
出处
期刊:Science Advances
[American Association for the Advancement of Science]
日期:2022-11-02
卷期号:8 (44)
被引量:64
标识
DOI:10.1126/sciadv.add6681
摘要
Infectious diseases originating from animals (zoonotic diseases) have emerged following deforestation from agriculture. Agriculture can reduce its land use through intensification, i.e., improving resource use efficiency. However, intensive management often confines animals and their wastes, which also fosters disease emergence. Therefore, rising demand for animal-sourced foods creates a "trap" of zoonotic disease risks: extensive land use on one hand or intensive animal management on the other. Not all intensification poses disease risks; some methods avoid confinement and improve animal health. However, these "win-win" improvements alone cannot satisfy rising meat demand, particularly for chicken and pork. Intensive poultry and pig production entails greater antibiotic use, confinement, and animal populations than beef production. Shifting from beef to chicken consumption mitigates climate emissions, but this common strategy neglects zoonotic disease risks. Preventing zoonotic diseases requires international coordination to reduce the high demand for animal-sourced foods, improve forest conservation governance, and selectively intensify the lowest-producing ruminant animal systems without confinement.
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