Animal agriculture is in the spotlight as commentators and researchers assess its contribution to greenhouse gas emissions, emerging infectious disease, environmental degradation, non-communicable food-related diseases and inadequate animal welfare. To date, however, research has largely failed to explore the significant differences between livestock species and the range of production systems under which they are raised. There is an absence of validated classification systems that are based on ontological processes. In many areas of the world, traditional livestock raising practices have survived for thousands of years and continue to date, yet they are under pressure with human population pressure, land and water use. In the 20th century, intensive livestock production systems were hailed as economic successes with environmental externalities largely ignored. Moving forward what constitutes ‘tolerable’ animal agriculture in a changing world facing multiple existential threats? Do the limits vary across geographies, production systems and cultures? If they do, how can these differences be measured? How might these limits contribute to defining associated sustainable and circular bioeconomies?
Question
What are the limits across major animal production systems for tolerable animal welfare, disease, climate and environmental vulnerabilities and how do we measure them?
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- 04 July 2022, e1
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Are scientists conflating zoonotic origin of pathogens with zoonosis to the detriment of understanding, disease prevention and management?
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- 11 July 2022, e2
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One Health most often has people as the primary beneficiary. How must One Health policies and practice change to make animal, plant and ecosystem health a primary focus that is influenced by human and environmental factors?
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 July 2022, e3
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How do the practical and pragmatic limitations in the design or implementation of wildlife disease surveillance systems bias our understanding of the drivers, epidemiology, and impact of pathogen traffic between wildlife and people or domestic species, or within wildlife host populations?
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- 21 July 2022, e4
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Is there an ideal curriculum and pedagogy to achieve an optimal One Health practitioner capable of contributing to the growing expectations for One Health?
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- 21 July 2022, e5
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How can One Health approaches be operationalized in order to enable action to reduce or prevent AMR?
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 27 October 2022, e6
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How can we operationalize the promotion and evaluation of nature-related ‘green’ health care within a One Health perspective?
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 09 December 2022, e7
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Results
Distribution of nutrients across the edible components of a modelled typical Australian lamb: A case study
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- 24 January 2023, e8
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How can deep time perspectives contribute to tackling contemporary One Health challenges, improving understanding and disease mitigation?
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- 23 February 2023, e9
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Results
Self-care and nature in the private and professional practice of healthcare professionals in Belgium
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- 27 February 2023, e10
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Question
How can we improve and facilitate multi-sectoral collaboration in warning and response systems for infectious diseases and natural hazards to account for their drivers, interdependencies and cascading impacts?
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- 27 February 2023, e11
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Results
A reimagined One Health framework for wildlife conservation
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- 16 March 2023, e12
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How to tackle food security and sustainability using a One Health Perspective?
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- 13 March 2023, e13
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Is the expression of agonistic behaviour precipitated by the pandemic events?
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- 08 March 2023, e14
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Impact Paper
Wildlife Health Australia; One Health in action
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- 28 July 2023, e15
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Results
Quality criteria of nature-based interventions in healthcare institutions: a scoping review protocol
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- 20 July 2023, e16
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Are current warning and responses systems suitable to respond to emerging infectious diseases?
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- 23 August 2023, e17
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What is the current and expected evolution of prevalence, geographical spread and impact of ticks and tick-borne diseases, and what strategies are needed to improve management, testing, diagnosis and treatment of these diseases amongst patients and animal populations?
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- 23 October 2023, e18
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Corrigendum
Are current warning and responses systems suitable to respond to emerging infectious diseases? – CORRIGENDUM
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 01 December 2023, e19
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