4.8 Article

Dietary species richness as a measure of food biodiversity and nutritional quality of diets

出版社

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1709194115

关键词

sustainable diets; diet quality; malnutrition; biodiversity; food biodiversity

资金

  1. Agriculture for Nutrition and Health (A4NH) CGIAR Research Programme (CRP)
  2. Benin: Ministry of Foreign Affairs Finland (FoodAfrica project)
  3. Cameroon: Flemish Interuniversity Council
  4. Ecuador: Flemish Interuniversity Council
  5. Congo: Flemish Interuniversity Council
  6. Congo: Leopold III fund for Nature Exploration and Conservation
  7. Congo: Stichting Roeping
  8. Sri Lanka: Global Environment facility
  9. Sri Lanka: United Nations Environmental Programme
  10. Sri Lanka: Food and Agriculture Organization
  11. Sri Lanka: Bioversity International
  12. Kenya: Humidtropics
  13. Kenya: A4NH CRPs
  14. Vietnam: Humidtropics
  15. Vietnam: A4NH CRPs
  16. Daniel and Nina Carasso Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Biodiversity is key for human and environmental health. Available dietary and ecological indicators are not designed to assess the intricate relationship between food biodiversity and diet quality. We applied biodiversity indicators to dietary intake data from and assessed associations with diet quality of women and young children. Data from 24-hour diet recalls (55% in the wet season) of n = 6,226 participants (34% women) in rural areas from seven lowand middle-income countries were analyzed. Mean adequacies of vitamin A, vitamin C, folate, calcium, iron, and zinc and diet diversity score (DDS) were used to assess diet quality. Associations of biodiversity indicators with nutrient adequacy were quantified using multilevel models, receiver operating characteristic curves, and test sensitivity and specificity. A total of 234 different species were consumed, of which < 30% were consumed in more than one country. Nine specieswere consumed in all countries and provided, on average, 61% of total energy intake and a significant contribution of micronutrients in the wet season. Compared with Simpson's index of diversity and functional diversity, species richness (SR) showed stronger associations and better diagnostic properties with micronutrient adequacy. For every additional species consumed, dietary nutrient adequacy increased by 0.03 (P < 0.001). Diets with higher nutrient adequacy were mostly obtained when both SR and DDS were maximal. Adding SR to the minimum cutoff for minimum diet diversity improved the ability to detect diets with higher micronutrient adequacy in women but not in children. Dietary SR is recommended as the most appropriate measure of food biodiversity in diets.

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