Abstract

Abstract The global food system is causing large‐scale environmental degradation and is a major contributor to climate change. Its low diversity and failure to produce enough fruits and vegetables is contributing to a global health crisis. The extraordinary diversity of tropical tree species is increasingly recognized to be vital to planetary health and especially important for supporting climate change mitigation. However, they are poorly integrated into food systems. Tropical tree diversity offers the potential for sustainable production of many foods, providing livelihood benefits and multiple ecosystem services including improved human nutrition. First, we present an overview of these environmental, nutritional and livelihood benefits and show that tree‐sourced foods provide important contributions to critical fruit and micronutrient (vitamin A and C) intake in rural populations based on data from sites in seven countries. Then, we discuss several risks and limitations that must be taken into account when scaling‐up tropical tree‐based food production, including the importance of production system diversity and risks associated with supply to the global markets. We conclude by discussing several interventions addressing technical, financial, political and consumer behaviour barriers, with potential to increase the consumption and production of tropical tree‐sourced foods, to catalyse a transition towards more sustainable global food systems. A free Plain Language Summary can be found within the Supporting Information of this article.

Highlights

  • Food systems are a major determinant of large-scale land transformation and degradation: globally ~43% of ice- and desert-free land is used for agriculture (Poore & Nemecek, 2018)

  • We discuss several risks and limitations that must be taken into account when scaling-up tropical tree-based food production, including the importance of production system diversity and risks associated with supply to the global markets

  • Reversing these trends requires a redesign of the global food system, which in turn necessitates a thorough understanding of which foods have the potential to simultaneously deliver environmental, nutritional and livelihood benefits at local and global levels

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Food systems are a major determinant of large-scale land transformation and degradation: globally ~43% of ice- and desert-free land is used for agriculture (Poore & Nemecek, 2018). To global markets can in some cases, depending on the crop, be associated with rapid transformation of traditional production systems towards industrialized monocultures, which, as discussed above, can reduce the environmental, nutritional and livelihood benefits of tree-based food production.

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call