Advancing the One Health Paradigm Through Integrated Biomonitoring
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Date
2026
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Tailor and Francis
Abstract
People, animals, and the environment are part of the One Health paradigm, which adds how
humans and other animals interact with one another and their environment, thereby providing a
holistic model for understanding the challenges posed by anthropogenic pressures and
ecological changes. Biomonitoring – the systematic observation of biological response to
environmental stressors – becomes a vital instrument in operationalizing the One Health
concept, especially in the identification of early indicators of ecological damage and exposure
to contaminants. This chapter looks at how integrated biomonitoring frameworks can create
disciplinary boundaries and improve environmental surveillance and information on holistic risk
assessments. By using bioindicators from across trophic levels as well as sentinel species in
terrestrial and aquatic systems, biomonitoring offers a strong determination of contaminant mechanisms, ecosystem health, and zoonotic disease threats. The chapter discusses recent
methodological progress, such as molecular biomarkers, integration of remote sensing, and
community-based participatory monitoring, all of which enhance the predictive capability and
spatial extent of biomonitoring networks. Case studies demonstrate how integrated
biomonitoring has guided One Health interventions in areas including the following:
antimicrobial resistance, pesticide exposure, and climate sensitive vector-borne diseases. The
chapter also discusses issues concerning data harmonization, ethical governance and crosssectoral
partnerships. In the long term, the advancement of the One Health agenda needs
stretching biomonitoring into the policy frameworks, public health approaches, and ecosystem
management to build resilience through timely evidence-informed decision-making at the
human–animal–environment interface.