2. Establish mandated reporting of complex One Health stressors The authority of governmental and international agencies to require reporting of spatial and temporal findings of pathogens and toxicants in people, animals, and the environment should serve as templates for required reporting of data on more species and stressors that impact their health. Reporting obligations should extend to human and animal health care providers; pharmacies; public, private, military, environmental, natural resource, and other laboratories engaged in health and environmental assessments; and state/ provincial, national, and non-governmental organizations that monitor native and exotic animal and plant populations. The expertise and findings of IUCN in gathering data not only on species but also on human interests should be drawn upon and emulated in order to identify pathways by which multiple problems can be solved through unified planning, management, and refinement. Surveillance technologies should allow onthe-fly acquisition and automated uploading of data into nested One Health databases. The greater good of reduced suffering and deaths in human and animal populations justifies mandating anonymized reporting and circumventing excessive privacy protections. Chronically underfunded international agencies, such as
WHO, should be generously supported by member nations, foundations, and donors. Because of the need to adjust surveillance efforts to situation-specific needs, funding should not be restricted by excessively prescriptive mandates. International agencies, governments, and universities should contribute funding to surveillance efforts while simultaneously providing training to build professional capacity.