| dc.description.abstract |
Forests support food security and nutrition worldwide, especially so for highly forest-dependent communities who collect a
variety of food products from nearby forests. While the importance of forest cover to the diets of forest-dependent communities has been well-researched, little is known regarding the role of more specifc forest characteristics – information that
would be valuable for better identifying the landscapes that support a nutritious and diverse diet. To address this research
gap, we linked child dietary data to remotely-sensed geospatial indicators of surrounding forest characteristics – using more
nuance than is typically undertaken – by examining forest age, tree density, and forest fragmentation in Kenya’s East African Montane Forests. Interestingly, dietary diversity of children demonstrated no or relatively weak associations with forest
characteristics. However, by parsing out individual food groups, we exposed the nuance and complexities associated with the
forest-diet relationship. Vegetable/fruit consumption was positively associated with open and moderately dense forest cover,
but negatively associated with fragmented forest cover. The consumption of meat and vitamin A-rich fruit was positively
associated with younger forest cover, and negatively associated with dense forest cover. Older forest cover was positively
associated with green leafy vegetable consumption, but negatively associated with other vegetable/fruit consumption. Our
fndings provide suggestive evidence that there is no single ‘ideal’ type of forest for supporting food security and nutrition –
rather, diferent types of forests are associated with diferent dietary benefts. Taken together, these results indicate the need
for more in-depth research that accounts for factors beyond the proximity and amount of generic forest cover. |
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