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Sleeping sickness and its relationship with development and biodiversity conservation in the Luangwa Valley, Zambia

机译:赞比亚卢安瓜谷的昏睡病及其与发展和生物多样性保护的关系

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The Luangwa Valley has a long historical association with Human African Trypanosomiasis (HAT) and is a recognised geographical focus of this disease. It is also internationally acclaimed for its high biodiversity and contains many valuable habitats. Local inhabitants of the valley have developed sustainable land use systems in co-existence with wildlife over centuries, based on non-livestock keeping practices largely due to the threat from African Animal Trypanosomiasis. Historical epidemics of human sleeping sickness have influenced how and where communities have settled and have had a profound impact on development in the Valley. Historical attempts to control trypanosomiasis have also had a negative impact on conservation of biodiversity. Centralised control over wildlife utilisation has marginalised local communities from managing the wildlife resource. To some extent this has been reversed by the implementation of community based natural resource management programmes in the latter half of the 20th century and the Luangwa Valley provides some of the earliest examples of such programmes. More recently, there has been significant uncontrolled migration of people into the mid-Luangwa Valley driven by pressure on resources in the eastern plateau region, encouragement from local chiefs and economic development in the tourist centre of Mfuwe. This has brought changing land-use patterns, most notably agricultural development through livestock keeping and cotton production. These changes threaten to alter the endemically stable patterns of HAT transmission and could have significant impacts on ecosystem health and ecosystem services. In this paper we review the history of HAT in the context of conservation and development and consider the impacts current changes may have on this complex social-ecological system. We conclude that improved understanding is required to identify specific circumstances where win-win trade-offs can be achieved between the conservation of biodiversity and the reduction of disease in the human population.
机译:卢安瓜河谷与人类非洲锥虫病(HAT)有着悠久的历史渊源,是该疾病的公认地理关注点。它也因其高生物多样性而享誉国际,并拥有许多宝贵的栖息地。过去几个世纪以来,该山谷的当地居民已经与野生生物共存,建立了可持续的土地利用系统,这是基于非牲畜饲养的做法,这主要是由于非洲动物锥虫病的威胁。人类昏睡病的历史流行影响了社区定居的方式和地点,并对流域的发展产生了深远的影响。控制锥虫病的历史尝试也对保护生物多样性产生了负面影响。对野生动植物利用的集中控制使当地社区无法管理野生动植物资源。在某种程度上,这种情况已经在20世纪后半叶实施了以社区为基础的自然资源管理计划,而卢安瓜谷提供了此类计划的最早例子。最近,在东部高原地区的资源压力,当地酋长的鼓励和姆富威旅游中心的经济发展的驱动下,大量人口不受控制地迁移到了卢瓦河中部。这带来了不断变化的土地利用方式,最显着的是通过畜牧业和棉花生产实现了农业发展。这些变化有可能改变HAT传播的地方稳定模式,并可能对生态系统健康和生态系统服务产生重大影响。在本文中,我们在保护和发展的背景下回顾了HAT的历史,并考虑了当前变化可能对该复杂的社会生态系统产生的影响。我们得出结论,需要更好地理解,以查明在保护生物多样性与减少人类疾病之间可以实现双赢取舍的具体情况。

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