Diversity lost: COVID-19 as a phenomenon of the total environment

Research output: Journal contributionsComments / Debate / ReportsResearch

Authors

  • Roberto Cazzolla Gatti
  • Lumila Paula Menéndez
  • Alice Laciny
  • Hernán Bobadilla Rodríguez
  • Guillermo Bravo Morante
  • Esther Carmen
  • Christian Dorninger
  • Flavia Fabris
  • Nicole D.S. Grunstra
  • Stephanie L. Schnorr
  • Julia Stuhlträger
  • Luis Alejandro Villanueva Hernandez
  • Manuel Jakab
  • Isabella Sarto-Jackson
  • Guido Caniglia

If we want to learn how to deal with the COVID-19 pandemic, we have to embrace the complexity of this global phenomenon and capture interdependencies across scales and contexts. Yet, we still lack systematic approaches that we can use to deal holistically with the pandemic and its effects. In this Discussion, we first introduce a framework that highlights the systemic nature of the COVID-19 pandemic from the perspective of the total environment as a self-regulating and evolving system comprising of three spheres, the Geosphere, the Biosphere, and the Anthroposphere. Then, we use this framework to explore and organize information from the rapidly growing number of scientific papers, preprints, preliminary scientific reports, and journalistic pieces that give insights into the pandemic crisis. With this work, we point out that the pandemic should be understood as the result of preconditions that led to depletion of human, biological, and geochemical diversity as well as of feedback that differentially impacted the three spheres. We contend that protecting and promoting diversity, is necessary to contribute to more effective decision-making processes and policy interventions to face the current and future pandemics.

Original languageEnglish
Article number144014
JournalScience of the Total Environment
Volume756
Number of pages14
ISSN0048-9697
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 20.02.2021

Bibliographical note

We would like to thank the Konrad Lorenz Institute for Evolution and Cognition Research (KLI) for providing a stimulating environment that fostered the conversations and collaborative writing that led to this paper. We also thank Amitangshu Acharya from the Institute of Geography, School of GeoSciences, University of Edinburgh, U.K. for his help in discussing some ideas of this paper during his fellowship at the KLI.

Copyright © 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Recently viewed

Researchers

  1. Dagmar Bussiek

Publications

  1. A sliding mode control using an extended Kalman filter as an observer for stimulus-responsive polymer fibres as actuator
  2. Implementing the No Harm Principle in International Economic Law
  3. The 1986 Principles Relating to Remote Sensing of the Earth from Outer Space (RS Princi­ples)
  4. First automatic size measurements for the separation of dwarf birch and tree birch pollen in MIS 6 to MIS 1 records from Northern Germany
  5. Irish English and Variational Pragmatics
  6. Does transition to IFRS substantially affect key financial ratios in shareholder-oriented common law regimes?
  7. The Enduring Ephemeral, or the Future is a Memory.
  8. From event management to managing events
  9. Participation in protected area governance
  10. How many Persistent Organic Pollutants should we expect?
  11. The strength of vertical linkages
  12. On the micro-structure of the German export boom
  13. “Normality” Revisited: Fieldwork and Family
  14. On the micro-structure of the German export boom
  15. Semi-polar root exudates in natural grassland communities
  16. Minimum return guarantees, investment caps, and investment flexibility
  17. The persistent decline in unionization in western and eastern Germany, 1980 - 2004
  18. Abiotic and biotic drivers of tree trait effects on soil microbial biomass and soil carbon concentration
  19. Analysis of ammonia losses after field application of biogas slurries by an empirical model
  20. Up, up and away: An update on the UK's latest plans for space activities
  21. § 394
  22. The influence of landscape change on multiple dimensions of human–nature connectedness
  23. Activities in retirement
  24. Akademisches Schreiben
  25. Organizational Restructuring as a Self-Reinforcing Process
  26. Egozentrierte Netzwerkanalysen
  27. Economies of scope in European railways
  28. Building a bridge between school and university
  29. Konsolidierung oder Emergenz?