Ecosystem restoration projects aim to restore biodiversity and associated compromised ecosystem services. Evidence is persuasive of the increased risks of zoonotic diseases with degradation and disturbances. However, the scientific literature on the mitigating effects of ecosystem restoration on zoonotic spillover is scattered, inconclusive and challenged by the lack of a conceptual framework and practical guidance.
“There is a strong need for an adaptive process offering practical guidance on how to conduct ecosystem restoration to maximize biodiversity and ecosystem services while minimizing the risk of zoonotic diseases potentially induced by these restorations”, explains University of Helsinki professor Frauke Ecke.
One Health-based adaptive process
To maximize the benefits and minimize the risks of ecosystem restoration, the researchers urge for a One Health-based adaptive process that includes key considerations for ecosystem restoration assessment.
“The process is founded in stakeholder engagement and co-creation. Ecosystem restoration projects need to develop targets for environment (diversity, climate, land use), animals (species community structure, pathogen and disease prevalence, vectors and reservoir abundance), and humans (cases of disease, exposure)”, says Ecke.
Failure to follow the approach may jeopardize global efforts to reverse worldwide biodiversity decline.
Climate change must be considered in restorations
Climate change can modify the cause-and-effect relationship of restorations. Meanwhile, environmental contaminants can bias the restoration outcome.
“When habitats recover from restoration, climate change can result in changes of species assemblages with knock-on effects on presence and abundance of reservoirs, non-reservoirs, vectors, and pathogens as well as zoonotic risk”, explains Heidelberg University professor Joacim Rocklöv.
Trophic rewilding can support ecosystem restoration
Ecosystem recovery tends to be protracted at best, particularly when using traditional restoration measures, which leaves critical niches for essential ecosystem functions unoccupied for extended periods.
“To mitigate this issue, trophic rewilding, a restoration concept focused on reintroducing ecologically significant species including predators, may provide a more immediate approach to restore ecosystem function and reduce disease risk”, says Ecke.
Link to the study
Ecke, F., Semenza, J.C., Buzan, E. et al.
Adaptive ecosystem restoration to mitigate zoonotic risks. Nat Ecol Evol (2025).
Policy brief
Link to
Horizon Europe Project BEPREP
The study was performed as part of the Horizon Europe Project BEPREP (Identification of best practices for biodiversity recovery and public health interventions to prevent future epidemics and pandemics). For more information about this and other ecosystem restoration projects, and elucidation of the link between biodiversity recovery and disease risk, see the
Ecosystem restoration – Process of halting and reversing degradation, resulting in improved ecosystem services and recovered biodiversity. Ecosystem restoration encompasses a wide continuum of practices, depending on local conditions and societal action.
Hazard – Process or phenomenon of organic origin or conveyed by biological vectors, including exposure to pathogenic micro-organisms, toxins and bioactive substances that may cause loss of life, injury, illness or other health impacts; property damage; loss of livelihoods and services; social and economic disruption; or environmental damage. Here mainly used as zoonotic hazard, i.e., presence, abundance, and prevalence of vector-borne and zoonotic pathogens.
One Health – Integrated, unifying approach that aims to sustainably balance and optimize the health of people, animals, and ecosystems. It recognizes that the health of humans, domestic and wild animals, plants, and the wider environment (including ecosystems) are closely linked and interdependent.
Reservoir – Agent in which a pathogen multiplies and evolves
Trophic rewilding – Ecological restoration strategy that uses species introductions to restore top-down trophic interactions and associated trophic cascades to promote self-regulating biodiverse ecosystems.
Zoonosis – Infectious disease caused by a pathogen (e.g. bacterium, virus, parasite or prion) that is transmitted from an animal to a human or vice versa.