Biodiversity and Human Health Biodiversity and Human Health   Field researcher inspects a deer mouse for signs of hantavirus

 

HUMAN POPULATION
IMPACTS ON BIODIVERSITY

The fate of the human species is inextricably interwoven with the collective fates of threatened wild spaces, as well as the plants and animals that live in them, around the globe. Healthy habitats are integral to healthy human populations worldwide.

Human Population Impacts on Biodiversity

A single species -- Mankind -- has more impact on habitat degradation throughout the globe than all other species combined. Read Dr. Mel Otten's article about the five primary processes of degradation: over harvesting, alien species introduction, habitat fragmentation, pollution and outright habit destruction.

In the News:

  • Water-Borne Diseases are One of the Greatest Threats to Human Health. Issues of access to clean drinking water are complicated by soaring populations living in sqalid conditions. The WHO estimates that at least 3.4 million people die annually due to water-borne diseases and related complications.
  • Is population control part of the solution? Demographers estimate that world population, currently at around 6 billion, will plateau in the next 70 years at 9 billion. A plateau sounds reassuring. Rubbing elbows with 50 percent more people than exist today seems less so. Should we strive to decrease the level at which we plateau?
  • As its population soars, California’s environment approaches a crisis. In 2000, California added a breathtaking 571,000 people, a 1.7 percent growth rate that outpaces that of Bangladesh. In all the media hoopla over the rolling blackouts in California, little attention was paid to the explosive increase in electricity demand due to the state's rapid population growth.

 

 

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