Conceptual Links between Landscape Diversity and Diet Diversity: A Roadmap for Transdisciplinary Research

Author:

Gergel Sarah E1ORCID,Powell Bronwen2,Baudron FrÉdÉric3ORCID,Wood Sylvia L R4,Rhemtulla Jeanine M1,Kennedy Gina5,Rasmussen Laura V1,Ickowitz Amy6,Fagan Matthew E7,Smithwick Erica A H2,Ranieri Jessica5,Wood Stephen A8,Groot Jeroen C J9,Sunderland Terry C H16

Affiliation:

1. Department of Forest and Conservation Sciences, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada

2. Department of Geography and BP is also affiliated with the Departments of African Studies and Anthropology at Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania

3. International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center CIMMYT-Southern Africa Regional Office, Harare, Zimbabwe

4. Future Earth Global Hub, Montreal, Quebec, Canada

5. Bioversity International, Rome, Italy

6. Center for International Forestry Research, Bogor, Indonesia

7. Department of Geography and Environmental Systems, University of Maryland—Baltimore County, Baltimore, Maryland

8. Nature Conservancy, Arlington, Virginia, and with the School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut

9. Department of Farming Systems Ecology, Wageningen University and Research, Wageningen, The Netherlands

Abstract

Abstract Malnutrition linked to poor quality diets affects at least 2 billion people. Forests, as well as agricultural systems linked to trees, are key sources of dietary diversity in rural settings. In the present article, we develop conceptual links between diet diversity and forested landscape mosaics within the rural tropics. First, we summarize the state of knowledge regarding diets obtained from forests, trees, and agroforests. We then hypothesize how disturbed secondary forests, edge habitats, forest access, and landscape diversity can function in bolstering dietary diversity. Taken together, these ideas help us build a framework illuminating four pathways (direct, agroecological, energy, and market pathways) connecting forested landscapes to diet diversity. Finally, we offer recommendations to fill remaining knowledge gaps related to diet and forest cover monitoring. We argue that better evaluation of the role of land cover complexity will help avoid overly simplistic views of food security and, instead, uncover nutritional synergies with forest conservation and restoration.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences

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