Abstract

In the discourse about the development of farmed animal production (terrestrial livestock production and aquaculture) in the tropics, two important food system outcomes emerge: (1) to supply animal-sourced food (ASF) at a level that suffices healthy future diets, including for poor people, and (2) to contribute to climate change mitigation and minimize pollution with nitrogen and phosphorus. Livestock production and aquaculture contribute to food security directly by increasing producers’ food diversity and availability, but also that of urban consumers, and indirectly through income generation and increased farm resilience. Recently, circularity has come to the fore as an integrated approach to food system development. Circularity has four cornerstones: (1) food crops have highest priority (which implies no food-feed competition), (2) avoid losses, (3) recycle waste and (4) use animals to unlock biomass that humans cannot eat. In this review, the role of farmed animals in circular food systems in the tropics is presented in four case studies and the impacts of circularity on food security and environmental impact mitigation are discussed. The cases are ruminants in grazing systems in West Africa and in Colombia, fish in pond aquaculture in general, and land-limited dairy production in Indonesia. Additionally, options for novel protein sources for use in livestock and fish feeding are presented. It is concluded that farmed animals are important in circular food systems because of their use of land unsuited for crop production, their upgrading of crop residues, and their supply of manure to crop production. Nevertheless, the increasing demand for ASF puts pressure on important characteristics of circularity, such as minimizing food-feed competition, maximization of use of waste streams in feed, and the value of manure for fertilization. Hence, in line with conclusions for Western countries, maximum circularity and sustainability of food systems can only be achieved by optimizing the population size of animals. Thus, a sustainable contribution of ASF production to global food security is complex and in not only a technical matter or outcome of an economic process balancing supply and demand. It requires governance for which public, private, and social actors need to partner.

Highlights

  • Farmed animal production, which includes terrestrial livestock production and aquaculture, is part of food systems

  • A food system encompasses the entire range of actors and their ... activities involved in the production, aggregation, processing, distribution, consumption and disposal of food products that originate from agriculture, forestry or fisheries, and parts of the broader economic, social and natural environments in which they are embedded (Van Berkum et al, 2018)

  • Farmed animals have a role in circular food systems: waste stream biomass can be used as feed, and farmed animals provide manure and pond sediment which can be used as fertilizer to maintain or improve soil quality

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Summary

Introduction

Farmed animal production, which includes terrestrial livestock production and aquaculture, is part of food systems. The sector uses most of the world’s grasslands and more than a third of the world’s arable land for feed production, as well as the irrigation and rainwater used on those lands Livestock uses these resources predominantly for feed production, with four broad impact pathways: (1) Conversion of forests and other natural vegetation to feed-crop land and pasture results in loss of biodiversity, depletion of aquifers, and GHG emissions (when soil organic matter turns into carbon dioxide and methane). Most N and P losses from livestock production are either associated with animal manure management or with the fertilization of feed crops and grazing lands. They take place at three stages of the supply chain. Losses may result from high application rates and poor phasing with plant uptake

Food security: rising demand for animal sourced foods
Environmental issues associated with farmed‐animal species and their products
ASF production in circular food systems
Objective of this paper
Major farmed animal species
Sheep and goats
Pigs and poultry
Farming systems with farmed animal species
Semi‐arid to semi‐humid grazing systems
Mixed crop‐livestock and aquaculture systems
Contribution of farmed animals to circular food systems
Pastoralist herding systems
Silvo‐pastoral systems in LAC
Fish in pond aquaculture
Land‐limited dairy production in Indonesia
Novel protein sources
Production of insect protein for feed in East Africa
Novel proteins in fish feeding
Microalgae
Macroalgae
Microbial (bacterial) biomass
Findings
Insect meal
Full Text
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