Though plants are omnipresent in our daily lives, we frequently fail to perceive them as anything more than inert green scenery. We are accustomed to valuing them merely as decorative elements or as simple providers of food and oxygen, yet we often overlook the profound impact they have on ecosystem resilience and our overall well-being. We have become so used to treating the botanical world as a silent setting that we forget plants are actually lead actors in our health and survival; while experts remain preoccupied with animals and pathogens, they risk ignoring the very entities that possess the power to either ignite or prevent the next global health emergency.
The One Health approach is an integrated framework designed to recognize the fundamental interdependence of human, animal, and environmental health. Its primary objective is to move beyond siloed management toward a collaborative system that fosters long-term prevention and ecosystem resilience rather than just reactive crisis management. However, current implementations often suffer from "plant-blindness," where plants are treated as a passive backdrop rather than as dynamic and active determinants of health. As described in the policy brief published within the B-Cubed and OneSTOP projects, this gap creates a structural bias toward animal and pathogen focused policies, leading to suboptimal responses and missed ecological drivers. Within the One Health framework, this "plant-blindness" causes us to overlook organisms that serve both as the essential foundation of our well-being and as the hidden drivers of emerging health crises.
A significant part of this problem stems from a governance and implementation gap where practitioners frequently misuse the terms "environment" and "ecosystem" as synonyms. In practice, the "environment" is often reduced to abiotic factors like climate and pollution, which obscures the specific role of plants as health actors. By strictly defining the environment as the physical context and the ecosystem as an interactive biological network in which plants are central, we can better integrate plant health into the One Health framework.
Plants serve as the essential foundation of health, underpinning everything from global food security and primary healthcare to the stability of microbiomes that influence human and animal immune systems. A critical but frequently ignored aspect of this relationship is the role of invasive alien plants, which act as direct drivers of disease and systemic health stressors. Ecologically impoverished systems are not only less tolerant to climate change but are also more susceptible to biological invasions, as the lack of plant competition allows invasive alien species to dominate and further degrade valuable land and disrupt delicate ecosystems. While diversity provides resilience, the spread of invasive alien plants like Prosopis juliflora undermines food security and heightens human vulnerability to allergies and vector-borne diseases, including malaria transmission. Other species may trigger direct pathologies, such as ragweed-induced (Ambrosia artemisiifolia) allergies or skin damage from giant hogweed (Heracleum mantegazzianum), and facilitate the proliferation of disease vectors like the water hyacinth (Pontederia crassipes) does for mosquitoes.
| Water hyacinth surrounded by mosquitoes (AI-generated image) |