Abstract

White-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) are large herbivores that thrive in urban and peri-urban landscapes. Their voracious appetite and ubiquity have made deer a significant threat to growing food in home and community gardens; features that often make important contributions towards household food security. Focusing on food availability, stability, utilization, and access, I outline how white-tailed deer threaten household food security. Deer threaten availability of food by widely consuming plants grown for human consumption. Deer threaten stability of household food security by causing spatially and temporally unpredictable food losses. Deer threaten utilization of food, through acting as sources of food-borne pathogens (i.e. Escherichia coli O157:S7). Deer threaten access to food by necessitating relatively high-cost economic interventions to protect plants from browsing. Although numerous products are commercially available to deter deer via behavioural modification induced by olfaction and sound – evidence of efficacy is mixed. Physical barriers can be highly effective for reducing deer browsing, but often come with a high economic cost. Users of community gardens benefit from fencing by receiving shared protection against deer herbivory at a significantly lower per capita cost. Among many other benefits, fenced community gardens are useful in mitigating the threats of white-tailed deer to household food security.

Highlights

  • Household food insecurity is defined as insufficient or unreliable access to food due to financial constraints and is increasingly recognized as a serious population health problem in Canada (Jessiman-Perreault & McIntyre, 2017)

  • Household food insecurity is disproportionately experienced by households of colour: the most recent survey of Canadian food insecurity found 28.9 and 28.2 percent of Black and Indigenous households respectively experienced some level of food insecurity compared to 11.1 percent of white households (Tarasuk & Mitchell, 2020)

  • A potential pathway to help alleviate household food insecurity is the self-provisioning of food produced via food gardening in home and community gardens

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Summary

Household food insecurity in Canada

Household food insecurity is defined as insufficient or unreliable access to food due to financial constraints and is increasingly recognized as a serious population health problem in Canada (Jessiman-Perreault & McIntyre, 2017). Based on a survey of 103,500 Canadian households conducted from 2017 to 2018, approximately 12.7 percent of respondents had experienced some level of household food insecurity within the past 12 months (Tarasuk & Mitchell, 2020). The occurrence and severity of household food insecurity does not affect all but is influenced by numerous socioeconomic factors including employment status, income level, receipt of social assistance, and immigration status. Numerous social interventions have been implemented to address food insecurity in Canada. In Newfoundland and Labrador, a collection of poverty reduction policies that included increasing the minimum wage and reducing income tax among the lowest earning households reduced household food insecurity from 59.9 percent in 2007 to 33.5 percent in 2012 among families receiving social assistance (Loopstra et al, 2015).

Food gardening as an approach to supporting household food security
Findings
An overview of the benefits of community gardens
Full Text
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