Joseph A.
Needoba
* and
Paul G.
Tratnyek
OHSU-PSU School of Public Health, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR 97239, USA. E-mail: needobaj@ohsu.edu
At its core, planetary health postulates that human wellbeing—and its gradual improvement—have largely been sustained by the stable environmental conditions of the Holocene, and that progress in modern society has been enabled by the relatively unconstrained exploitation of Earth’s natural resources. However, mounting evidence suggests that Earth system responses are approaching thresholds that might become planetary-scale tipping points after which system functions will change dramatically.4 Crossing these thresholds could result in widespread collapse of the ecosystem services and environmental conditions that modern civilization requires. This alarming assessment of the state of the planet has attracted the attention of researchers from a wide range of disciplines, not only in climate science, but across the whole range of natural sciences and fields such as public health, engineering, economics, and political science. The goals of this research are unified under the planetary health theme, which aims to reframe well-known environmental concerns in the context of human health, environmental justice, and global health. A transdisciplinary perspective such as planetary health is needed to evaluate and prioritize societal changes that could reduce the risk of crossing planetary thresholds.
ESPI, like its predecessor the Journal of Environmental Monitoring, is a multidisciplinary publication that reports peer-reviewed research on environmental science, especially environmental chemistry, including natural atmospheric and biogeochemical processes, the effects of human activities on these processes, and the occurrence, risk, and control of environmental stressors such as chemical and microbial contaminants. Many of the journal’s articles address Earth system science or planetary-scale environmental processes that fit well under the theme planetary health research. It is useful to link these articles in a thematic web collection on planetary health for several reasons. First, it is likely that the authors of these publications did not know the term planetary health when they published their study, but in hindsight it clearly is applicable. Second, by highlighting the connections between diverse research topics from a new perspective we hope to encourage a more holistic appreciation of how the individual research papers featured here contribute to a common goal. Third, being one of the first collections of papers with a planetary health theme in an established environmental journal, we hope to help define the theme from an environmental chemistry perspective. Finally, we aimed to make this web collection a useful reference for those outside of the field of environmental science, for example global health advocates and social scientists, so they can easily access quality papers in planetary health without having to navigate the whole breadth of the ESPI research community.
To achieve these goals, we began by searching ESPI papers for keywords related to the nine planetary boundaries originally described in Rockström et al.4 and updated in Steffen et al.5 The boundaries are climate change, novel entities (formally chemical pollution), stratospheric ozone depletion, atmospheric aerosol loading, ocean acidification, biochemical flows of nitrogen and phosphorus, freshwater use, land system change, and biosphere integrity. The resulting list of roughly 70 papers included topics relevant to nearly all the planetary boundaries, the only exceptions being ocean acidification and ozone depletion. From this list we selected roughly 20 papers for scientific significance with direct application to some aspect of human health, environmental justice, or environmental stewardship. For example, a series of papers focused on the Ganges–Brahmaputra–Meghna delta system (Kay et al. 2015, Lázár et al. 2015, Whitehead et al. 2015, Jin et al. 2015; see Table 1) addresses the vulnerability of the region to sea level rise, climate change, nitrogen and phosphorus pollution, and land use change. Other papers clearly address the novel entities boundary, addressing important topics in chemical pollution for which very little is known regarding severity and effects on human health at the global scale (Sobek et al. 2016, McLachlan et al. 2018, Wannaz et al. 2018, Exley 2013; see Table 1). Still other papers featured here group into freshwater use with a focus on water quality (Malham et al. 2014, de la Cruz et al. 2013, Julian 2016; see Table 1).
Authors | Title | DOI |
---|---|---|
Kay et al.; 2015 | Modelling the increased frequency of extreme sea levels in the Ganges–Brahmaputra–Meghna delta due to sea level rise and other effects of climate change | DOI: 10.1039/c4em00683f |
Lázár et al.; 2015 | Agricultural livelihoods in coastal Bangladesh under climate and environmental change – a model framework | DOI: 10.1039/c4em00600c |
Whitehead et al.; 2015 | Dynamic modeling of the Ganga river system: impacts of future climate and socio-economic change on flows and nitrogen fluxes in India and Bangladesh | DOI: 10.1039/c4em00616j |
Jin et al.; 2015 | Assessing the impacts of climate change and socio-economic changes on flow and phosphorus flux in the Ganga river system | DOI: 10.1039/c5em00092k |
Sobek et al.; 2016 | The dilemma in prioritizing chemicals for environmental analysis: known versus unknown hazards | DOI: 10.1039/c6em00163g |
McLachlan et al.; 2018 | Predicting global scale exposure of humans to PCB 153 from historical emissions | DOI: 10.1039/c8em00023a |
Wannaz et al.; 2018 | Source-to-exposure assessment with the Pangea multi-scale framework – case study in Australia | DOI: 10.1039/c7em00523g |
Exley; 2013 | Human exposure to aluminium | DOI: 10.1039/c3em00374d |
Malham et al.; 2014 | The interaction of human microbial pathogens, particulate material and nutrients in estuarine environments and their impacts on recreational and shellfish waters | DOI: 10.1039/c4em00031e |
de la Cruz et al.; 2013 | A review on cylindrospermopsin: the global occurrence, detection, toxicity and degradation of a potent cyanotoxin | DOI: 10.1039/c3em00353a |
Julian; 2016 | Environmental transmission of diarrheal pathogens in low and middle income countries | DOI: 10.1039/c6em00222f |
We encourage readers to explore the full breadth of planetary health relevant papers in this web collection, and check back over time for new papers that are added. We hope that this web collection will serve as a hub of scientific publications that are relevant to planetary health much in the same way that the recently launched journals GeoHealth and The Lancet Planetary Health are intended to bring together diverse topics for the broad audience interested in planetary health.
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2018 |