4.7 Article

Food Behavior in Emergency Time: Wild Plant Use for Human Nutrition during the Conflict in Syria

期刊

FOODS
卷 11, 期 2, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/foods11020177

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Eastern Mediterranean; emergency human behavior; ethnobotany; Sleeq; traditional food; Zaatar

资金

  1. Internal Grant Agency of the Faculty of Tropical AgriSciences, Czech University of Life Sciences Prague (IGA FTZ) [20213113]

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Wild food plants have played an important role in providing food during the conflict in Syria, with an increase in reliance on these plants reported by local people. Species such as Origanum syriacum, Rhus coriaria, Eryngium creticum, and Cichorium intybus were frequently mentioned by informants. Steamed leafy vegetables, breakfast/dinner dishes, and soup were the most popular wild plant-based meals.
Wild food plants (WFPs) have been an important source of human nutrition since ancient times, and it particularly revives when conventional food is not available due to emergency situations, such as natural disasters and conflicts. The war in Syria has entered 10 years since it started in 2011, and it has caused the largest war-related crises since World War II. Nearly 60% of the Syrian population (12.4 million people) are food-insecure. WFPs are already culturally important in the region, and may be supplementing local diets during this conflict. Our study aimed to uncover the conflict's effect on the use of WFPs and to know what species are consumed by local people during the current crisis. The fieldwork was carried out between March 2020 and March 2021 in the Tartus governorate located in the coastal region of Syria. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 50 participants (26 women and 24 men) distributed in 26 villages along the study area. We recorded the vernacular names, uses, plant parts used, modes of preparation and consumption, change in WFP use before and during the conflict, and informants' perceptions towards WFPs. We documented 75 wild food plant species used for food and drink. Almost two-thirds (64%) of informants reported an increase in their reliance on wild plants as a food source during the conflict. The species of Origanum syriacum, Rhus coriaria, Eryngium creticum, and Cichorium intybus were among the most quoted species by informants. Sleeq (steamed leafy vegetables), Zaatar (breakfast/dinner food), and Louf (soup) were the most popular wild plant-based dishes.

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