Can Indigenous Lands Buffer Against Zoonotic Diseases?— Insights from the Brazilian Atlantic Forest
16 Pages Posted: 30 Apr 2025
Abstract
Indigenous Peoples hold traditional knowledge rooted in their ancestral ties to the land, contributing to lower deforestation and higher biodiversity. These ecological benefits may also support public health, as intact ecosystems help reduce the risk of zoonotic diseases linked to habitat loss and human encroachment. However, the role of Indigenous Lands (ILs) in mitigating such disease risks remains poorly understood. Here, we examined how ILs, along with landscape composition (forest and agriculture cover) and configuration (forest edge density), affect the incidence of Chagas Disease, Hantavirus, Cutaneous and Visceral Leishmaniasis and Brazilian Spotted Fever across the Brazilian Atlantic Forest. We modelled each disease incidence based on annual data collected at the municipality level between 2001 to 2022. The relative effects of ILs, forest and agriculture covers and forest edge density were first analysed considering the entire Atlantic Forest, and secondly according to the extent of ILs into four classes (0%, <10%, 10% to 40%, and >40%). Overall, ILs cover negatively affected the incidence of all but Chagas Disease; forest cover negatively affected four diseases but had a positive effect on Cutaneous Leishmaniasis, which was also positively affected by the amount of agriculture areas; forest edge density exerted unexpected negative effects on Cutaneous Leishmaniasis and on the Brazilian Spotted Fever. In summary, our results showed a protective effect of forest cover on disease risk, which was exacerbated as the ILs cover increased in the municipality. Likely due to a more sustainable resource management and lower levels of exposure within ILs, these Lands seemly play a protective role on human health as their extent increases in the municipalities of the Brazilian Atlantic Forest. Our findings contribute to greater recognition of these areas for the provision of ecosystem services.
Keywords: Brazilian Spotted Fever, land use change, forest loss and fragmentation, Leishmaniasis, Hantavirus, Chagas disease, One Health
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