FAO and Max Planck Institute take on species-swapping diseases

Focus on interactions between wild animals, livestock, and human populations to reduce risks, strengthen responses

May 30, 2011

Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) and the German Max Planck Institute for Ornithology in Radolfzell, are joining forces to study species-swapping diseases that move back and forth between wild animals and domestic livestock and, in some cases, jump to human victims.

In today’s interconnected world, population growth, modern transportation and increased global trade in animals and animal products have vastly accelerated the spread of zoonoses – species jumping diseases – capable of wreaking major impacts on farmers’ livelihoods and human health alike. A/H1N1 swine flu and the highly pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza are but two recent examples.

A memorandum of understanding signed today by FAO and the Max Planck Institute for Ornithology’s Department of Migration and Immuno-ecology, based in Radolfzell, Germany, establishes a strategic partnership aimed at combining the organizations’ expertise and resources to tackle this problem.

The first goal is to determine which agro-ecological landscapes represent the greatest risk for disease transmission among human, livestock, and wild animal populations.

Among other things, the agreement commits FAO and the Institute to helping countries strengthen their national capacity to balance preservation of natural resources and biodiversity, while expanding and intensifying agricultural production to ensure food security.

Strategic partnership, holistic vision

“Combining the Institute’s extensive trove of data on wildlife movements with FAO data on human parameters, such as livestock production and landscape changes due to agriculture, forestry and urbanisation, will permit a new level of insight into animal-human interactions, conservation priorities, and more effectively management and respond to health risks,” said Martin Wikelski, director at Max Planck Institute for Ornithology in Radolfzell.

FAO Deputy Director-General for Knowledge Ann Tutwiler added; “Disease dynamics can no longer be considered in isolation within the livestock sector but must be placed into a broader context of sustainable agriculture, socio-economic development, environment protection and sustainability.”

“This is why FAO is moving forward with the ‘One Health’ approach that emphasizes a multidisciplinary collaboration in solving challenging health issues arising from the livestock-wildlife-human-ecosystem interfaces – working closely with partners like the Max Planck Institute,” Tutwiler said.

 

About FAO and the Institute

The Max Planck Institute for Ornithology’s Department of Migration and Immuno-ecology has wide-reaching expertise in investigating animal movements on a global scale, including the creation of its online, open-access database on world animal movements, MoveBank.

FAO has long worked to safeguard animal and veterinary public health, maintain animal genetic diversity, and minimize the environmental impact of livestock production. The UN agency has played a leading role in helping countries cope with outbreaks of zoonotic and non-zoonotic animal diseases, including understanding and addressing the factors leading to their emergence in the first place. This includes work on avian influenza, swine flu, rift valley fever, African sleeping sickness as well as the international effort to stamp out rinderpest.

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