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International projects source: SICRIS

Identification of best practices for biodiversity recovery and public health interventions to prevent future epidemics and pandemics

Keywords
epidemic, infect-shed-spill-spread cascade, infection dynamics, nature restoration, pandemic, public health, reservoir, rewilding, stress, susceptibility, zoonoses
Organisations (1) , Researchers (24)
1988  University of Primorska
no. Code Name and surname Research area Role Period No. of publicationsNo. of publications
1.  56934  Aja Bončina  Biology  Researcher  2026 - 2025  33 
2.  24375  PhD Elena Bužan  Biology  Head  2022 - 2025  437 
3.  59949  Stefan Cidilko  Biology  Researcher  2024 - 2025 
4.  61531  Marko Čorkalo  Biology  Researcher  2025 
5.  56936  Luka Duniš  Biology  Researcher  2024 - 2025  54 
6.  06734  PhD Dušanka Janežič  Computer intensive methods and applications  Researcher  2026 - 2025  510 
7.  58360  PhD Sonja Jantar  Biochemistry and molecular biology  Technical associate  2026 - 2025 
8.  57864  PhD Stanislav Kolenčik  Biology  Researcher  2023 - 2024  21 
9.  53504  PhD Tilen Komel  Biochemistry and molecular biology  Researcher  2024 - 2025  43 
10.  59794  Jan Kopinič  Biology  Researcher  2024 - 2025 
11.  57048  Minja Krstić  Biology  Researcher  2024  10 
12.  35545  Damjan Muhič  Linguistics  Technical associate  2025  14 
13.  50720  PhD Žiga Velkavrh  Mathematics  Researcher  2024  28 
14.  60517  Lan Zirkelbach  Biology  Researcher  2024 - 2025 
Abstract
"Epidemics and pandemics - most of them caused by zoonotic and vector-borne emerging diseases - are globally threatening our health and welfare at an alarming pace. Prevention of future disease outbreaks will be pivotal to secure human welfare and demands transformative change. ""Biodiversity-is-good-for-our-health"" has become a new paradigm in disease risk mitigation. Consequently, nature restoration targeting biodiversity recovery - isolated or in combination with public health interventions - has been identified as a major disease risk mitigation tool. While there are thousands of ongoing and planned nature restoration projects globally, we lack knowledge a) if such restorations indeed interrupt the infect-shed-spill-spread cascade and mitigate disease risk, b) or if they rather amplify the risk and c) on success factors characterizing restorations that mitigate disease risk. BEPREP will fill this lack in knowledge and provide practical guidance. In spatially and temporally replicated field studies and experiments in case studies in Europe and the tropics, we will study a)-c) and reveal the causal mechanisms of infection dynamics and of drivers along the infect-shed-spill-spread cascade. BEPREP's participatory and transsectorial approach by actively involving indigenous and local communities will enable the identification of success factors of best practice restorations and interventions, incl. nature-based solutions, to guide future biodiversity recovery measures that promote healthy ecosystems. These success factors will contribute to a) interrupt the infect-shed-spill-spread cascade and b) ultimately prevent disease outbreaks. The results of BEPREP help to create a European society prepared and responsive to disease risk. BEPREP will hence accelerate the ecological transition required to meet EU's Biodiversity Strategy for 2030 as a core part of EU's Green Deal and support a green recovery following the COVID-19 pandemic."
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