Sustaining life : how human health depends on biodiversity

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Sustaining life : how human health depends on biodiversity

2008

The Earth's biodiversity-the rich variety of life on our planet-is disappearing at an alarming rate. And while many books have focused on the expected ecological consequences, or on the aesthetic, ethical, sociological, or economic dimensions of this loss, Sustaining Life is the first book to examine the full range of potential threats that diminishing biodiversity poses to human health. Sustaining Life presents a comprehensive--and sobering--view of how human medicines, biomedical research, the emergence and spread of infectious diseases, and the production of food, both on land and in the oceans, depend on biodiversity. Ten chapters cover everything from what biodiversity is and how human activity threatens it to how we as individuals can help conserve the world's richly varied biota. Seven groups of organisms, some of the most endangered on Earth, provide detailed case studies to illustrate the contributions they have already made to human medicine, and those they are expected to make if we do not drive them to extinction. Drawing on the latest research, but written in language a general reader can easily follow, Sustaining Life argues that we can no longer see ourselves as separate from the natural world, nor assume that we will not be harmed by its alteration. Our health, as the authors so vividly show, depends on the health of other species and on the vitality of natural ecosystems.
health environmental health biological diversity social aspects

Authors

Chivian, Eric, Bernstein, Aaron

Broad subject
Biological diversity
Call number
IUCN-2008-025
ISBN
978-0-19-517509-7
Imprint
New York : Oxford University Press, 2008
Number of copies
2
Physical Description
xxiii, 542p. : ill.
Published in
IUCN, Harvard Medical School, Center for Health and the Global Environment, US, Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), Secretariat, UNDP, UNEP

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