key: cord-331255-t85yioyl authors: Rohr, Jason R.; Barrett, Christopher B.; Civitello, David J.; Craft, Meggan E.; Delius, Bryan; DeLeo, Giulio A.; Hudson, Peter J.; Jouanard, Nicolas; Nguyen, Karena H.; Ostfeld, Richard S.; Remais, Justin V.; Riveau, Gilles; Sokolow, Susanne H.; Tilman, David title: Emerging human infectious diseases and the links to global food production date: 2019-06-11 journal: Nat Sustain DOI: 10.1038/s41893-019-0293-3 sha: doc_id: 331255 cord_uid: t85yioyl Infectious diseases are emerging globally at an unprecedented rate while global food demand is projected to increase sharply by 2100. Here, we synthesize the pathways by which projected agricultural expansion and intensification will influence human infectious diseases and how human infectious diseases might likewise affect food production and distribution. Feeding 11 billion people will require substantial increases in crop and animal production that will expand agricultural use of antibiotics, water, pesticides and fertilizer, and contact rates between humans and both wild and domestic animals, all with consequences for the emergence and spread of infectious agents. Indeed, our synthesis of the literature suggests that, since 1940, agricultural drivers were associated with >25% of all — and >50% of zoonotic — infectious diseases that emerged in humans, proportions that will likely increase as agriculture expands and intensifies. We identify agricultural and disease management and policy actions, and additional research, needed to address the public health challenge posed by feeding 11 billion people. I nfectious diseases are emerging at an unprecedented rate with significant impacts on global economies and public health 1 . The social and environmental conditions that give rise to disease emergence are thus of particular interest, as are management approaches that might reduce the risk of emergence or re-emergence 1 . At the same time, undernutrition -the insufficient intake of one or more nutrients -remains a major source of global ill health [2] [3] [4] [5] . Together, the unprecedented rate of infectious disease emergence and the need to sustainably feed the global population represent two of the most formidable ecological and public health challenges of the twentyfirst century [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] (Fig. 1) , and they interact in complex ways (Fig. 2) . Although modern agricultural technologies have reduced hunger, improved nutrition and spared some natural ecosystems from conversion to agriculture, current global agricultural production and distribution infrastructure still leaves billions of people's diets deficient in one or more crucial nutrients, with major consequences for global morbidity and mortality 10 , and these deficiencies are expected to worsen with climate change [11] [12] [13] [14] . Credible estimates are available for specific nutrient shortfalls -for example, 1.6 billion people suffering iron-or vitamin B 12 -deficiency anemia 15 , 0.8 billion people with insufficient dietary energy (that is, calorie) intake 16 , 33% of pre-school age children and 15% of pregnant women at risk of vitamin A deficiency 17 -but the world still lacks a rigorous, recent assessment of the population suffering shortfalls of any one or more nutrients, although the number is surely in the billions. By 2100, the United Nations projects that the global population will grow by nearly 4 billion, to exceed 11 billion people 18 . Meeting the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goal, to "eradicate hunger" (https://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/) for this expanding human population will necessitate a large increase in food supplies, with major changes to agricultural production and distribution systems, infrastructure and social protection programmes 6 (Fig. 3) . Despite large and, in many cases, growing inequalities, the global population is on average expected to become richer, and historically, with greater affluence has come greater consumption of food products in general and more animal-sourced foods in particular, both of which further increase food demand and thus the requirement for agricultural expansion and/or intensification 19 . Agriculture already occupies about half of the world's land and uses more than two-thirds of the world's fresh water 20 , and recent studies have suggested that agricultural production might need to double or triple by 2100 to keep pace with projected population growth and food demand [6] [7] [8] 21 (Fig. 3) . Meeting this demand using present agricultural production systems could require replacing >10 9 hectares of natural ecosystems with agricultural production, approximately 7% of the global land area, which is larger than the continental United States, although continuous efficiency improvements in agriculture will compel re-evaluation of these estimates. In turn, this agricultural expansion could result in an estimated ~2-fold increase in irrigation, ~2.7-fold increase in fertilizer 6,10,22 and 10-fold increase in pesticide use (Fig. 3) . The challenges of feeding >11 billion people and managing infectious diseases intersect in several ways ( Figs. 1 and 2) . First, the expansion and intensification of agriculture are disproportionately occurring in tropical, developing countries 6, 22, 23 , where 75% of deaths are attributable to infectious diseases 24 , where the risk of disease emergence might be greatest, and where disease surveillance and access to health care, particularly for those infections that accompany extreme poverty, are most limited 1, 25 . Second, agricultural expansion and intensification have historically come with massive habitat conversion, contamination with animal waste and increasing use of agricultural inputs, such as pesticides and antibiotic growth promoters. Beyond their direct adverse effects on human health 26, 27 , agricultural biochemical inputs are known to have direct effects on emerging human infectious diseases, and can also serve as indirect drivers by contributing to the emergence of wildlife diseases 28 that constitute important sources of emerging infections in humans 1, 29 . However, the strengthening of agricultural production systems can also improve nutrition, which has pronounced benefits for combating many infectious diseases at the individual and population levels 2, 30 . Although concerns have been raised regarding the environmental impact of agricultural expansion and intensification 6,8-10,22,31 , their effects on infectious disease risk have not been synthesized. Here, we review both the beneficial and adverse effects of agricultural expansion and intensification on the transmission of human infectious diseases. We synthesize the pathways through which agricultural practices influence human infectious diseases, and vice versa, and identify opportunities to minimize the adverse consequences of agricultural growth while maximizing the human health benefits of agricultural development (Fig. 1 ). Agricultural development can yield direct improvements to nutrition, and through several mechanisms, nutrition can be a critical determinant of infectious disease susceptibility and progression 4,32 (Figs. 1 and 2). For example, immune responses are energetically costly 33 and thus undernutrition often reduces the development and effectiveness of immune responses that can limit or clear infections. The relationship between infectious disease and nutritional Agricultural production can improve human health by reducing food prices and enhancing nutrition, which can increase resistance to infectious diseases. However, freshwater habitats established for irrigation, as well as other agricultural inputs, often increase the risk of vector-borne diseases, such as malaria and schistosomiasis. In general, rural residents are most vulnerable to these increases in infectious disease, whereas consumers some distance away derive most of the benefits from increased food production. To maximize human health given the impending 11 billion humans projected on the planet by 2100, society must minimize the adverse consequences of agricultural growth while maximizing the health benefits. Images by Kate Marx. status can function in reverse as well, because many parasitic infections place direct demands on host nutrition, causing undernutrition when food is limited 34 . In fact, some parasites, such as helminths, can even cause eating disorders, such as geophagy (desire to eat soil), bulimia and anorexia 35 . Enduring infections often require rapid and effective repair of tissue damage caused by parasites, which is also costly. Hence, certain infections can cause undernutrition, which itself can compromise both resistance and tolerance to infections 34, 36 . By improving nutrition, agricultural development should facilitate combating many infectious diseases. For example, death rates from acute respiratory infections, diarrhoea, malaria and measles, diseases that on average kill more than a child every 30 seconds (1 million per year) 37 , are much higher in children who suffer undernutrition than in those that do not 3, 4 . In addition, poor maternal nutrition and associated impaired fetal growth are strongly associated with neonatal death from sepsis, pneumonia and diarrhoea 4 ; undernourishment is a well-understood risk factor for 4 . Although the traditional Green Revolution approach to food production has succeeded in reducing undernourishment arising from insufficient calorie and protein intake, it has been very slow in reducing micronutrient deficiencies 39 , which can be have significant effects on defence against disease. To make matters worse, where violence, unrest and terrorism impede access to food, such as in parts of Africa and central Asia, morbidity and mortality attributed to communicable diseases can be further exacerbated 2 . Although research suggests that improving nutrition will generally improve responses to infectious diseases, there may be important exceptions. For certain diseases, such as schistosomiasis and many respiratory infections, pathogenesis is a product of host immunity, often from hyperinflammation 40, 41 . Thus, undernutrition can actually decrease symptoms by reducing the strength and pathogenicity of immune responses 40 . In addition, as nutrition improves, some parasites might proliferate faster than immunity can increase 34 , resulting in more, rather than less, morbidity, with the classic example that dietary intake of iron can increase malariainduced mortality 42 . In this section, we review the links between rural economy, infrastructure and infectious disease. , phosphorous (c), fertilizer and pesticide use (d), cropland area (e), and irrigated land area (f) and associated 95% prediction bands (light blue bands). 'Nitrogen' refers to the normalized estimated global amount of nitrogen nutrients in fertilizers produced (originally reported in thousands of tonnes, now in metric tonnes). 'Phosphorous' refers to the normalized estimated global amount of P 2 O 5 nutrients in fertilizers produced (originally reported in thousands of tonnes, now in metric tonnes). For a, data were collected from the World Bank. For b-f, data were collected from the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations and statistical models were developed based on the relationships between these variables and global human population density. After the best model was identified, year was substituted for human population density based on the fit in a. These projections should be evaluated with considerable caution because the models assume that human population size is the only factor that affects fertilizer and pesticide use and the amount of arable and irrigated cropland, when in reality, many factors affect these responses (for example, climate, diets, type of crops grown and so on). They merely illustrate that even an extremely parsimonious model seems to track past patterns tolerably well and thus could serve as a basis for coarse projections. See Supplementary Methods for details of the statistical models used to generate these figures and Supplementary Table 1 for coefficients and statistics for the best-fitting models. Economic development. Economic development, especially agricultural development, has historically driven reductions in both infectious diseases and poverty across many settings. In fact, the poor financially benefit more from economic growth in the agricultural sector than in industrial or service sectors 43, 44 . The early stages of economic development often involve the construction of infrastructure to facilitate food production and distribution, including roads, dams and irrigation networks 43, 44 . More recently, the early stages of rural development often include rapid expansion of telecommunication, and to a lesser degree, electrification, both of which are promising but underutilized resources for disease monitoring and control in the developing world 45 . Other rural infrastructure that is more crucial to infectious disease prevention, such as safe water, sanitation and energy supplies, often follows or is developed concurrently 43, 44 . In 43 developing countries, rural infrastructure that provided access to sanitation and safe water explained 20% and 37% of the difference in the prevalence of malnutrition and child mortality rates between the poorest and richest quintiles, respectively 46 . Moreover, clean water, sanitation and electricity can also facilitate the construction of schools and health clinics that can help to further reduce disease through education, prevention and treatment. Hence, if the history of the developed world repeats itself in the developing world, then it seems plausible that agricultural development necessary to feed 11 billion people might help to reduce infectious diseases by promoting economic development and rural infrastructure. There are several important assumptions to this hypothesis, however, such as: (1) it is possible to feed 11 billion people; (2) the rate of economic development will match or exceed the pace of human population growth; and (3) developing countries are not in an infectious disease-driven 'poverty trap' , which is the notion that poverty increases the chances of acquiring and succumbing to disease, and chronic disease traps humans in poverty [47] [48] [49] [50] [51] . If agricultural development lags behind population growth or if clean water supplies, sanitation and electricity do not immediately follow road, dam and irrigation construction, then the prevalence of many infectious diseases could remain unchanged or even increase as human populations grow 52 . Agricultural irrigation and freshwater redistribution. One major change in rural infrastructure that often accompanies agricultural development is the redistribution of fresh water, which has well-known consequences for the transmission of infectious diseases. For example, because 40% of crop production comes from only the 16% of agricultural land that is irrigated, and irrigated lands accounted for much of the increased yields experienced during the Green Revolution 10 , the potential for increased irrigation infrastructure to exacerbate infectious diseases is a critical concern (Fig. 1) . Importantly, agricultural development has caused both declines of certain types of fresh water, such as wetlands, and increases of others, such as dams, reservoirs and irrigation schemes. One of the largest drivers of global wetland losses has been conversion to agriculture 53 , which has led to declines in diseases that rely on wetland habitats. For example, Japan's successful eradication of schistosomiasis during the mid-twentieth century relied in part on conversion of wetlands to orchards in schistosomiasis-endemic areas 54 , although replacing oxen with horses, which are less susceptible to Schistosoma japonicum, as draft animals is also thought to have contributed substantially 54 . Similarly, some of the earliest successes in malaria control at the turn of the twentieth century occurred in the southern United States, where wetland drainageincluding for agricultural conversion -was one of a suite of antitransmission strategies used by the Rockefeller Foundation in its landmark malaria control efforts 55 . Although wetlands often decline with agriculture, dams, reservoirs and irrigation networks often increase, and this redistribution of fresh water has been widely associated with increases in some vectors and hosts of human pathogens 56 . For example, construction of the Aswan High Dam in Egypt and the accompanying irrigation network was associated with a rise in mosquito vectors and the disfiguring mosquito-borne disease lymphatic filariasis, commonly known as human elephantiasis 57 . Likewise, dam and irrigation construction resulted in increases in malaria in Sri Lanka and India 56, 58 , and a sevenfold increase in malaria in Ethiopia 59 . A meta-analysis of 58 studies revealed that humans living near irrigation schemes or in close proximity to large dam reservoirs had significantly higher risk of schistosome infections than humans that did not live near these water resources 60 , at least partly because of increased freshwater habitat for intermediate snail hosts. Similarly, a recent analysis of schistosomiasis case data from the past 70 years across sub-Saharan Africa showed far-reaching effects of dams and irrigation schemes, with increases in schistosomiasis risk extending up to hundreds of kilometres upstream from the dams themselves 61 . Hence, dams, reservoirs and irrigation networks related to agricultural expansion are likely to increase vector-borne and waterborne diseases unless water resources are developed in deliberate and coordinated ways to mitigate these risks 62 . Urbanization, globalization and the movement of agricultural products. The world's population became majority urban in 2007 and urbanization continues to outpace population growth, especially in developing countries. Urbanization necessarily extends food supply chains, as consumers reside further from farms and fisheries. Although only 23% of the food produced globally for human consumption is traded across international borders 63 , globalization is likewise elongating food supply chains. Furthermore, as the costs of international travel have declined over time, the movement of people across borders has likewise increased. The expanded spatial scope and increased frequency, speed and volume of people and agricultural products moving within and among countries necessarily facilitates the spread of pathogens. For example, in Ecuador, there is evidence that the construction of new roads has affected the epidemiology of diarrheal diseases by changing contact rates among people as well as between people and contaminated water sources 64 . Each year in the United States, there are already an estimated 48 million people with illnesses, 128,000 hospitalizations and 3,000 deaths from food-borne infections 65 , and imported foods -especially from developing countries with poor sanitation infrastructure and weak food safety enforcement -have been associated with a rise in food-borne illness 66 . In addition, globalization is already thought to be a factor in the spread of human influenza viruses that spillover from poultry and swine 67, 68 . Although modernization of food supply chains, especially those linking farms in developing countries to high-income consumers in cities and high-income countries, has typically accelerated the diffusion of stricter food safety and quality standards 69, 70 , as urbanization and globalization further extend food supply chains, enhanced monitoring for the spread of pathogens across transportation networks and strengthened food safety regulations will be needed. In this section, we review the effects of agricultural industrialization. Anti-parasitic and antibiotic drug use. As the global human population increases, there will almost certainly be an increase in high density, industrialized livestock and aquaculture operations. Currently, such livestock operations are vulnerable to devastating losses of animals to disease. For instance, in just the last 25 years, an influenza A virus (H5N1) and a foot-and-mouth outbreak led to the destruction of more than 1.2 million chickens 10 and 6 million livestock in China and Great Britain 71 , respectively, and a 'mad cow disease' epizootic led to the slaughter of 11 million cattle worldwide 10 . Similar scenarios have occurred in aquaculture. In the past three decades, there has been more than fourfold growth in industrial aquaculture worldwide 72 , which should continue to increase as food demand grows and wild fish and shellfish captures push the limits of renewable production 73 . Bacterial outbreaks in aquaculture are common, especially in developing countries where there are sanitary shortcomings 72 . In an effort to prevent these catastrophic disease-associated losses and improve animal growth, the agricultural industry uses a larger proportion of global antibiotic and anthelmintic production than human medicine, and most of the antibiotics are provided at non-therapeutic doses in the absence of any known disease 74, 75 . In fact, although estimates are lacking for most countries in the world, in the United States, nearly nine times more antibiotics are given to animals than humans and, of the antibiotics given to animals, more than 12 times as many are used nontherapeutically as therapeutically 74 . This widespread use of antibiotics and anti-parasitic drugs (for example, anthelmintics) in industrialized agriculture and aquaculture could have important implications for human infectious diseases because it seems to be driving microbial resistance to these drugs, some of which are also used in human medicine 72, 74, 76 . For example, livestock are a primary source of antibiotic-resistant Salmonella, Campylobacter and Escherichia coli strains that are pathogenic to humans 74 . There is evidence that antibiotic-resistance genes acquired from aquaculture are being transferred to human systems and these pathogens have subsequently caused outbreaks 72 . Anthelmintic resistance is also rife among parasitic worms of livestock and is strongly implied for parasitic worms of humans 77 . As livestock and aquaculture production expand to address growing food demands, it is likely that current antibiotics and anthelmintics will become less effective because of evolved resistance, and thus infectious diseases of domesticated animals and humans will be more difficult to treat 75 . Pesticides, fertilizers and disease. Pesticides, particularly insecticides, have shared value for suppression of agricultural pest populations and disease-carrying insect vectors, such as mosquitoes and other flies. Because of the anticipated sharp increase in pesticide use by 2100 (Fig. 3) , insecticide resistance is also expected to increase, with important implications for the control of diseases carried by insect vectors. Insecticides with widespread shared use for both crop protection and vector control include pyrethroid, organophosphate and organochlorine insecticides 78 . Several mosquito vectors of human and livestock pathogens have already evolved some resistance to these compounds 78 . If agricultural expansion and intensification is accompanied by an increased use of insecticides, vector resistance may become more common and the control of vectorborne diseases more challenging. In addition to potentially driving vector resistance, increased pesticide use is likely to cause numerous other effects on host-parasite interactions. Pesticides can alter disease risk by modifying host susceptibility to parasites [79] [80] [81] . For example, many pesticides are immunomodulators that can increase infectious diseases of wildlife and humans 82, 83 , or are endocrine disruptors of humans with potential downstream effects on immunity 84 . Even if pesticides do not directly affect immunity, detoxification of pesticides is energetically 'expensive' for the host, and thus pesticide exposure can reduce available energy resources for humans and zoonotic hosts to invest into parasite defences 85, 86 . Pesticides can also affect human disease risk by altering the densities of hosts or parasites or their natural enemies or mutualists 87, 88 . Several pesticides can alter host behaviours or be directly toxic to hosts and parasites, which in turn can modify contact rates between parasites and human hosts. In addition, pesticides can alter community composition, which can indirectly affect behaviours or densities of intermediate and zoonotic hosts and parasites. Although chemical contaminants can be deadly to many free-living stages of parasites, both empirical trends and theoretical models suggest that stress associated with pesticide exposure can increase non-specific or generalist pathogens 79, 89, 90 . In addition to the impacts that pesticides can have on infectious diseases, they can also contribute to non-infectious diseases, such as cancers, birth defects, miscarriages and impaired childhood development 91 , which can further strengthen the poverty-infectious disease trap. Indeed, among African agricultural households, there is evidence of an association between increased pesticide use and increased time lost from work due to sickness 27 . In addition to an increase in pesticides, nitrogen-and phosphorous-based fertilizers are expected to increase threefold by 2050 to boost food production, and most of this increase will occur in tropical regions already rich with pathogens 6, 10, 22 . Although the effects of environmental nutrient enrichment on disease are indirect and complex, with some infections increasing and others decreasing, two reviews on the subject suggest that elevated nutrient levels more often than not exacerbate the impact of infectious disease 92, 93 . For example, phosphorous enrichment can benefit mosquitoes that transmit malaria and West Nile virus 92, 93 . In addition, nitrogen-and phosphorous-based fertilizer use can increase the number of snails that transmit flatworms that cause human schistosomiasis 92, 93 . Conversion of natural habitat to agriculture can increase the abundance of ecotones (boundaries between ecological systems), change species composition and reduce native biodiversity 94, 95 . Ecotones play an important role in a number of important emerging infectious diseases 96, 97 , and reduced biodiversity that accompanies agricultural intensification can increase zoonotic disease emergence and can worsen already endemic diseases [98] [99] [100] . A recent global meta-analysis suggests that, based on the available literature, such biodiversity losses generally increase infections of wildlife and zoonotic infections of humans 101 . However, studies of the relationship between biodiversity change and infectious disease risk tend to focus on a single parasite or disease, often of non-human animals, which limits the ability to determine more broadly the effects of agricultural intensification on the overall burden of infectious disease in human populations 102 . Recent studies have found that the local loss of dense forests, largely from agricultural expansion, affected diarrheal diseases, acute respiratory infections and general fever in Cambodian children 103 and infectious disease incidence in Nigerian children over a decade 104, 105 . Proximate causes probably included reduced regulation of microbial contaminants in surface and ground waters, increased smoke from biomass burning, shifts in the ranges of insect vectors and decreased access to forest ecosystem services. A major concern is the potential for positive feedbacks between poverty, biodiversity loss, soil degradation and infectious disease 106, 107 . Several mechanisms can underpin these reinforcing relationships. The first arises as a result of poor rural peoples' reliance on limited biophysical assets for their livelihoods. As households clear forests, deplete soils or overharvest biota to meet near-term consumption needs, this resource degradation can compromise future economic productivity and increase disease risk. In addition, poverty, environmental degradation, biodiversity loss and disease can quickly become mutually reinforcing responses to natural shocks, such as droughts or floods, or to protracted conflict in a region. There are also more direct examples. For instance, global net losses of tropical forests remained unchanged during the 1990s and 2000s (at approximately 6 million ha yr −1 or 0.38% annually 108 ; also see https://glad.umd.edu/projects/global-forest-watch and https:// www.globalforestwatch.org) and forest clearing can lead to transmission of zoonotic disease by increasing contact with wild animals. Conversely, encroachment of people and domesticated animals into natural areas can introduce diseases to wildlife that can devastate wild populations and create reservoirs for the disease to be transmitted back to domesticated animals 109 (see next section for further discussion and citations). Especially as the agricultural frontier expands, considerable attention must be paid to monitoring and managing these biodiversity-poverty-disease feedbacks 106 . A central tenet of epidemiology is that the incidence of many infectious diseases should increase proportionally with host density because of increased contact rates and thus transmission among hosts 110 . Hence, increasing human and livestock densities could cause increases in infectious diseases unless investments in disease prevention are sufficient to prevent these increases. Given that most of the increase in human and livestock densities are expected to occur in developing countries where disease surveillance, pest control, sanitation, and medical and veterinary care are limited, there is little reason to expect that control efforts will keep up with the expected increases in infectious diseases associated with increasing densities of these hosts. As host densities and thus transmission increase, theory suggests that parasite virulence should also increase under some circumstances 111 . When virulence of a pathogen is tied to its propagule generation within the body (such as occurs with many viral infections), the intermediate virulence hypothesis posits that an intermediate level of virulence maximizes parasite transmission because it balances producing many parasite offspring (increasing parasite fitness) with detriments to host survival due to pathology (decreasing parasite fitness). The balance in this trade-off determines parasite persistence. Hence, as host densities increase and transmission becomes more frequent, the cost of increased virulence declines, shifting the optimum towards higher virulence 111 . Consequently, for pathogens that experience this virulence trade-off, increases in human, crop and livestock densities have the potential to augment both the incidence and severity of infectious diseases. Feeding 11 billion people -and the associated increase of land converted to agricultural production and livestock grazing -is expected to cause a surge in human-livestock, human-wild animal and livestock-wild animal contact rates, increasing the likelihood of 'spillover' events, which are defined as pathogen transmission from a reservoir host population to a novel host population 112, 113 . As natural ecosystems are converted to crop land or range land, interactions among humans, and domesticated and wild animals, could increase 66 . Furthermore, if developing countries follow a trajectory similar to developed countries, then their demand for meat will increase, further increasing human-livestock, human-wild animal and livestock-wild animal contact rates 114 . These interactions are crucial because 77% of livestock pathogens are capable of infecting multiple host species, including wildlife and humans 115 , and based on published estimates from the 2000s, over half of all recognized human pathogens are currently or originally zoonotic 29, 116, 117 , as are 60-76% of recent emerging infectious disease events 1, 29, 117 (Fig. 4) . Examples of recent zoonotic disease emergences with enormous impacts on either livestock, humans or both, many of which might have agricultural drivers, include avian influenza, salmonellosis (poultry and humans), Newcastle disease (poultry), swine flu, Nipah virus (pigs and humans), Middle East respiratory syndrome (camels and humans), bovine tuberculosis, brucellosis (mostly cattle and humans), rabies (dogs and humans), West Nile virus, severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) and Ebola (humans) 1, 113 . To quantify the relationship between agricultural factors and disease emergence in humans through time, we used the human disease emergence database of Jones et al. 1 . We classified land-use change, food industry and agricultural industry as agricultural drivers of human disease emergence (see Supplementary Methods) . These analyses revealed that agricultural drivers were associated with 25% of all diseases and nearly 50% of zoonotic diseases that emerged in humans since 1940 (Fig. 5) . These values are even higher if we include the use of antimicrobial agents as an agricultural driver of human disease emergence, given that agricultural uses of antibiotics outpace medical uses in the developed world nearly nine to one 74, 118 . Several factors have materialized that facilitate spillover events associated with disease emergence 113 . Spillover appears to be a function of the frequency, duration and intimacy of interactions between a reservoir and novel host population 112 . For example, influenza is believed to have jumped from horses to humans soon after domesticating horses and then made additional jumps to humans from other domesticated animals, such as poultry and swine 119 . Similarly, when free-range turkeys were prevented from interacting with wild birds and when interactions between domesticated pigs and wild fruit bats were reduced, influenza and Nipah virus incidence 115 , human pathogens that are currently or originally zoonotic 29, 116 , and recent emerging pathogens that are zoonotic 1, 29 . dropped, respectively, suggesting wild-animal sources of these infections 120, 121 . In sub-Saharan Africa, the high frequency and duration of environmental interactions between different species of Schistosoma worms infecting humans and cattle has undoubtedly facilitated their hybridization, and these hybrid schistosomes are more virulent to humans than their non-hybrid counterparts 122 . These factors associated with spillover and disease emergence could be targeted to reduce transmission potential as human populations and agricultural productivity increase. Given that most human population growth is expected to occur in developing, tropical countries, hunting, fishing and gathering pressures will almost certainly rise in subsistence economies 13, 123 . The consequences of these pressures might initially increase contact rates between humans and wildlife. This could increase disease risk as bushmeat hunting is already thought to be responsible for several emerging human infectious diseases 116 . To make matters worse, bushmeat hunting is the second biggest threat to biodiversity behind habitat loss, and biodiversity losses can contribute to disease emergence 101 . However, if humans overexploit these natural resources, then human-wildlife interactions could eventually decline as species go extinct, which could reduce spillover events. Changes in the composition of biodiversity associated with overhunting and overfishing can also have complex indirect effects on disease risk mediated by species interactions. For example, empirical evidence supports the notion that defaunation of large vertebrates in Africa should increase zoonotic disease risk by reducing the predators and competitors (large herbivores) of rodents, a common reservoir of human pathogens 124 . Similarly, overfishing of snail-eating cichlids in Lake Malawi in Africa seems to have been a causal factor in snail population and human schistosomiasis increases there 125 . Investigations of the effects of overexploitation on infectious diseases remain in their infancy, but the consequences for human populations could be profound. Up to this point, we have focused on the effects of feeding 11 billion people on infectious diseases, but the relationship is bidirectional. That is, human infectious diseases can also impact the agricultural and economic development necessary to feed the growing human population (Fig. 2) . For example, the overuse of antibiotics, anthelmintics and pesticides to prevent diseases is driving resistance to these chemicals that will compromise future crop, livestock and aquaculture production. In sub-Saharan Africa, areas with higher historical tsetse-fly abundance, the vector of the parasite (Trypanosoma brucei) that causes African sleeping sickness in humans and cattle, experienced greater lags in the adoption of animal husbandry practices (for fertilizer and labour in agricultural enterprise) that hindered agricultural development and prosperity in Africa long before and after Europeans colonized 126 . In rural subsistence communities, any source of ill health can significantly impact people's productivity, yields and agricultural output [47] [48] [49] . For example, human immunodeficiency virus/AIDS has reduced average life expectancy in sub-Saharan Africa by 5 years since 1997, and a Kenyan study found that crop production by rural subsistence-farming families dropped 57% after the death of a male head of household 127 . Many neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) impose devastating productivity losses for affected people that can impede agricultural development from local to national to regional scales 49 . Some low-income communities appear mired in this poverty-disease trap, and thus might require substantial investment in health systems to promote the necessary agricultural and economic growth to pull them out of the povertydisease cycle [47] [48] [49] [50] [51] . The goal of identifying potential changes to infectious disease risk associated with feeding the growing human population is not only to draw attention to this important current and future problem but to also encourage preparation for these changes by stimulating agricultural-and disease-related research, management and policy that could maximize the human health benefits of agricultural development 128 . One urgent challenge is the problem of antibiotic, anthelmintic and pesticide resistance. Analyses demonstrate that, in some cases, improvements in growth and feed consumption can be achieved by improved hygiene instead of antibiotics 76 . Indeed, all antibiotics as growth promoters were banned in the European Union in 2006 129 . To curb antimicrobial consumption in food animal production, Van Boeckel et al. 75 suggest: (1) enforcing global regulations to cap antimicrobial use, (2) adhering to nutritional guidelines leading to reduced meat consumption, and (3) imposing a global user fee on veterinary antimicrobial use. In addition, as recommended by the World Health Organization, International Organization for Epizootics, and Food and Agriculture Organization, national and international policies based on best management practices should be developed and implemented that document when and how antibiotics should be used, and agencies should be established to monitor their use, mandate reporting and enforce these policies 76 . Finally, given that host genetic variability can reduce disease risk 110 , large-scale industrial livestock operations could add genetic variability into their artificially selected food animals in an effort to reduce epidemics and epizootics. These changes promise to secure the long-term viability of antibiotics and anthelmintics for curing diseases of humans and non-human animals. Another challenge that seems surmountable is to enhance education and health literacy. Not surprisingly, education has been documented as a major contributing factor to reducing infectious diseases, especially NTDs, and reducing NTDs can have reinforcing positive effects on the ability of humans to fight more deadly diseases, such as AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis 49 . Limiting NTDs could also have knock-on effects for education and health literacy because NTDs impede cognition, learning and school attendance 49 . Indeed, an investment of just US$3.50 per child for NTD control can result in the equivalent of an extra school year of education 49 . This is likely an underestimate because of unaccounted for indirect effects of deworming on learning. A recent study revealed large cognitive gains among children who were not dewormed but had older siblings who were 130 . Thus, enhanced education and NTD control have the potential to synergistically fuel agricultural and economic development and facilitate escape from the poverty-disease trap. National and international shifts in investments could also potentially pay large dividends for nutrition, infectious disease control and poverty reduction. There is considerable evidence that the developing world will struggle to feed its growing human population because of the poverty trap of infectious disease 49 . However, evidence also suggests that this trap might be broken through investments in health infrastructure and preventive chemotherapy [47] [48] [49] . Curing worm diseases has the potential added benefit of reducing nutritional needs of cured individuals by ceasing the feeding of their parasites. By reducing food demand, these drugs could also protect the environment by reducing the conversion rate of natural areas to agriculture. This, in turn, might help to curb climate change, which is one of the greatest threats to global food security 11 and might also increase disease risk 131, 132 . Understanding the economic relationships among infectious disease treatment and prevention, food production, poverty and climate change in the developing world are important areas of future research. As human populations increase, there might be more pathogen spillover events that could result in new emerging human infectious diseases. Historically, humans have combated emerging diseases through early detection followed by coordinated quarantine, as demonstrated by the SARS outbreak in 2003 and the Ebola outbreak in 2014. We recommend continued and improved coordinated international disease surveillance, but this approach reacts to rather than prevents disease. We recommend a shift in both research and disease management efforts towards proactive management approaches. One proactive approach that has promise for preventing zoonotic disease emergence is biodiversity conservation 98, 101 , but more research is needed to evaluate its effectiveness across various types of zoonotic diseases and its costs and benefits relative to more proven reactive public health interventions. Ultimately, science needs a better understanding of pathogen spillover, the origins of disease emergence and post-spillover evolution so that human disease emergence can be better predicted and prevented 112, 113, 133 . Improved and diversified plant and animal genetic material could also help to simultaneously reduce hunger and disease. Many efforts are already well underway; for example, introducing C 4 traits into rice to enhance higher photosynthetic capacity in a warming world, and breeding drought-and flood-tolerant cereals, pulses and vegetables better suited to increased frequency of extreme weather events that can help sustainably enhance productivity. Crops and livestock genetically adapted to resist more pests can reduce pesticide and antibiotic use. In addition, given that micronutrient deficiencies are now the most widespread source of undernutrition globally, commodity research must diversify beyond merely boosting productivity of staple cereals. Far greater attention is needed on approaches that add mineral and vitamin content to foods 39 . Other, perhaps more challenging, interventions also merit attention. Closing 'yield gaps' on underperforming lands, increasing cropping efficiency, eating less meat and excess per capita food consumption -which also have adverse health impacts on noninfectious diseases, such as high blood pressure, diabetes and heart disease -and reducing food waste and loss have the potential of doubling global food supplies 6, 114, 134, 135 , while simultaneously allowing financial savings to be redirected towards health infrastructure to control disease. In addition, family planning, promoting female education and job market prospects, and enhancing early childhood survival have proved very effective at reducing human population growth 136 . Finally, producing food in more urban and suburban environments through vertical farming (the practice of growing produce in vertically stacked layers) also has potential to enhance food production locally, and might have reduced agrochemical and transportation costs and non-target effects relative to more traditional farming 135 . Investments into predictive models could also pay dividends. Agricultural environments are complicated, multi-species systems that exhibit interactions at many levels. The complexity further increases from the tensions that arise in balancing expanding agricultural systems, social benefits and infectious disease risk. All of this complexity can overwhelm many analytical tools and experiments, which makes advances in mathematical modelling especially crucial to addressing these issues. Box 1 describes several examples of advances in mathematical modelling that illustrate their promise for analysing the links between agricultural practices and the dynamics of infectious diseases, projecting risks to future decades, influencing risks through either intentional (policies and interventions) or unintentional (continued habitat Box 1 | Modelling tools for quantitative analysis of agriculture-infectious disease systems Mathematical models facilitate the investigation of a complex web of interactions between agricultural systems, social dynamics and infectious diseases in the presence of the substantial nonlinearities inherent in these disparate processes. A notable example is a body of theory and analyses that have emerged to examine the links between agricultural systems and the dynamics of infectious diseases in the context of global development 48 . The approach combines ecological and economic theory to model population subsistence and health, with the goal of examining the conditions under which subsistence and health needs of populations are met. The fundamental consumer-resource relationships that underlie the biological generation of capital via agricultural production can be formalized in ordinary differential equation models, which can be coupled with similarly structured models that estimate the gains and losses in human capital associated with population health and the increasing risk of acquiring and succumbing to infectious diseases associated with poverty. Key insights emerge from such integrated models. High prevalence of infectious diseases among populations that rely heavily on subsistence, labour-intensive agriculture can reduce agricultural productivity, degrade human capital, undermine economic growth and generate conditions that systematically reinforce poverty 48 . Poverty, in turn, increases disease transmission as the lack of access to clean water and preventive care often associated with the lifestyle of the poor make them continuously exposed to parasites and pathogens embedded in the environment 142 . Malnutrition, a common consequence of poverty, may weaken immune response and increase susceptibility to disease. Poor education and lack of resources lead to further reduction of health-seeking behaviour. Modelling shows that the reinforcing feedback between poor health, labour productivity and capital formation triggers a cycle of increasing poverty and disease, known as disease-driven 'poverty trap' 48 . It also shows that poverty traps are reinforced by the asymmetry between the slow pace of investment in disease protection associated with increasing capital due to agricultural development, and the relatively faster ecological changes in transformed landscape that foster disease transmission 143 . Modelling can also reveal the impact of temporary versus lasting structural interventions in changing the development trajectories of poor populations. These intrinsically quantitative and mechanistic investigations can indicate specific conditions for economic growth or resilience that can inform development strategies, via, for instance, targeted investments in agricultural development, human health or ecological conservation that may reinforce globally stable development equilibria 48 . A final major contribution of such models is to encourage primary data collection in support of deeper understanding of system dynamics, and greater inference of underlying determinants of health and wealth. Because there are strong traditions of primary data collection in population biology, epidemiology and other disciplines wherein mathematical modelling is being advanced, the expansion of model-based research on coupled agricultural-health systems is likely to yield new field data collection efforts and direct the design of experiments, which, in turn, will yield greater opportunities for model parameterization and validation. These new empirical field data are what are desperately needed to explore whether the predictions of highly stylized models are supported in settings far more complex than modelled. Simulation modelling, in turn, can also permit exploration of the uncertainty intrinsic to field experiments that generate data in a specific place and time, advancing understanding of system performance under a range of feasible weather, market and other conditions not realized during the period of data collection. conversion and antibiotic use) actions, and incorporating economic and social costs of various public health or agricultural interventions. These models should help direct field experiments, which are desperately needed to parameterize and validate these models and to quantify key sources of uncertainty. Ultimately, we believe 'win-win' scenarios for controlling infectious diseases, increasing agricultural productivity and improving nutrition are attainable. Although this sort of integrative thinking has been historically rare because agriculture and public health have been perceived as disparate disciplines, it is beginning to slowly penetrate these distinct fields of study. For example, several agrochemicals seem to increase the risk of human schistosomiasis and agriculturally derived zoonotic pathogens, and thus researchers are actively attempting to identify agrochemicals that might 'kill two birds with one stone' , reducing crop pests and thus increasing food production while not increasing or even decreasing human pathogens [137] [138] [139] . Similarly, researchers are beginning to consider the introduction of prawns as biological control agents of schistosomiasis, which could simultaneously decrease disease and increase nutrition -because restored prawns can be fished, harvested and consumed without compromising their diseasecontrolling benefits 61, 140 . We believe that more resourceful and creative thinking and interdisciplinary interactions (among medicine, public health, agriculture professionals, economists, anthropologists, sociologists, modellers, empiricists and wildlife biologists, in the developed and developing world) have great promise for sustainably and simultaneously improving human nutrition while controlling infectious diseases. In conclusion, we hope that by synthesizing the complex intersection of food production and human health, we have highlighted the value of increasing agricultural-and disease-related research, management and policy, maximizing the benefits of agricultural development while minimizing its adverse effects on human health and the environment, and preparing for the imminent changes driven by the 11 billion people expected to inhabit Earth by 2100. 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The authors declare no competing interests. Supplementary information is available for this paper at https://doi.org/10.1038/ s41893-019-0293-3. Correspondence should be addressed to J.R.R.Publisher's note: Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.