调整研究投资方向,将研究不足的作物用于可持续粮食系统

IF 4 2区 农林科学 Q2 FOOD SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Sussy Munialo, Kadambot H. M. Siddique, Nigel P. Barker, Cecilia Moraa Onyango, Jacqueline Naalamle Amissah, Lydia Nanjala Wamalwa, Qinisani Qwabe, Andrew J. Dougill, Lindiwe Majele Sibanda
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在大多数农业系统中,几种主要作物(玉米、水稻和小麦)占据主导地位,这阻碍了为改善粮食安全和营养状况而采取的干预措施的实施。研究和发展的注意力集中在提高这些作物的产量和利用率上,对其他作物的研究和利用不足。因此,由于饮食多样性差,营养不良率居高不下,但仍有一些 "机会作物 "未得到充分研究。机会作物可以解决粮食不安全、营养不良、生物多样性缺乏以及气候适应能力差等问题。这项研究探讨了农业系统的多样化问题,以分析调整研究投资方向,将研究不足的作物纳入其中,能否增加营养增益,提高膳食多样性。研究成果以内罗毕、比勒陀利亚和加纳三所非洲一流大学的出版物数量为基准,涉及谷物、蔬菜、豆类、块根和块茎作物以及坚果五大类作物的多样性和营养。研究结果表明,玉米是这三个机构主要研究的作物。三个机构对珍珠粟、指粟和山药的研究成果较少:苋菜和夜来香(比勒陀利亚)、甘薯(比勒陀利亚和加纳)、马拉马豆(内罗毕)和大豆(内罗毕和加纳)。所有五个群组都获得了营养增益,特别是研究不足的本地作物,如小米、苋菜、夜葵、山药、红薯、马拉马豆和大豆。比勒陀利亚的谷物、块根和块茎作物、蔬菜和坚果(加纳)以及豆类(内罗毕)对营养增益的贡献更大。研究结果表明,将对研究最少的作物的研究与其他研究和发展举措(政策和传播)成功结合起来,可以增加营养和改善膳食多样性。营养成分的增加将对粮食安全和营养产生积极影响,有助于实现非洲 2063 年议程、联合国可持续发展目标和减少粮食进口。研究结果可为非洲大陆不同机构的研究投资和决策提供参考。考虑到营养贡献、气候变化适应性、市场潜力和生物多样性贡献,需要针对指粟、苋菜、甘薯、大豆和腰果等作物进行研究投资。进一步的分析应探讨特定作物的生产、社会经济(适销性和创收)和环境收益(对气候变化的适应能力)。还需要制定框架,以指导分析影响这些作物对粮食安全和营养贡献的因素的性质和范围,以及考虑地理分布和机构参与的具体作物研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Reorienting research investments toward under-researched crops for sustainable food systems

Reorienting research investments toward under-researched crops for sustainable food systems

The dominance of a few staple crops (maize, rice, and wheat) in most agricultural systems hampers the application of interventions to improve food security and nutrition. Research and development attention has focused on improving the production and utilization of these crops, leaving other crops under-researched and underutilized. Subsequently, there have been high malnutrition rates due to poor diet diversity, yet there are “opportunity crops” that remain under researched. The opportunity crops can unlock solutions to food insecurity, malnutrition, a lack of biodiversity, and indeed poor climate adaptation. The study explored diversification in agricultural systems to analyze whether reorientation of research investment to include under-researched crops can increase nutrient gain and enhance dietary diversity. Research outputs benchmarked as the number of publications from three leading African universities, Nairobi, Pretoria, and Ghana, were related to crop diversity and nutrition of crops in five clusters: cereals, vegetables, legumes, roots and tubers, and nuts. The findings show that maize was the predominantly researched crop across the three institutions. Low research outputs were observed for pearl millet, finger millet, and yam across the three institutions: amaranth and nightshade (Pretoria), sweet potatoes (Pretoria and Ghana), Marama bean (Nairobi), and soya bean (Nairobi and Ghana). There was nutrient gain across all five clusters, particularly from under-researched indigenous crops such as finger millet, amaranth, nightshade, yam, sweet potatoes, Marama bean, and soybean. Nutrient gain was contributed more by cereals and root and tuber crops from Pretoria, vegetables and nuts (Ghana), as well as legumes (Nairobi). The findings demonstrate that incorporating research on the least researched crops with successful integration of other research and development initiatives (policy and dissemination) can increase nutrition and improve dietary diversity. The nutrient gain will positively affect food security and nutrition, contributing to the achievement of Africa Agenda 2063, the United Nation's Sustainable Development Goals, and reducing food imports. The findings can inform research investment and decision across different institutions within the African continent. Research investment targeting crops such as finger millet, amaranthus, sweet potatoes, soya beans, and cashew nuts is needed considering the nutritional contribution, climate change adaptability, market potential, and biodiversity contribution. Further analysis should explore production, socio-economic (marketability and income generation), and environmental gains (adaptive ability to climate change) for specific crops. The development of frameworks to guide the analysis of the nature and scope of factors affecting the contribution of these crops to food security and nutrition, as well as research on specific crops considering geographic distribution and institutional involvement, is also needed.

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来源期刊
Food and Energy Security
Food and Energy Security Energy-Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
CiteScore
9.30
自引率
4.00%
发文量
76
审稿时长
19 weeks
期刊介绍: Food and Energy Security seeks to publish high quality and high impact original research on agricultural crop and forest productivity to improve food and energy security. It actively seeks submissions from emerging countries with expanding agricultural research communities. Papers from China, other parts of Asia, India and South America are particularly welcome. The Editorial Board, headed by Editor-in-Chief Professor Martin Parry, is determined to make FES the leading publication in its sector and will be aiming for a top-ranking impact factor. Primary research articles should report hypothesis driven investigations that provide new insights into mechanisms and processes that determine productivity and properties for exploitation. Review articles are welcome but they must be critical in approach and provide particularly novel and far reaching insights. Food and Energy Security offers authors a forum for the discussion of the most important advances in this field and promotes an integrative approach of scientific disciplines. Papers must contribute substantially to the advancement of knowledge. Examples of areas covered in Food and Energy Security include: • Agronomy • Biotechnological Approaches • Breeding & Genetics • Climate Change • Quality and Composition • Food Crops and Bioenergy Feedstocks • Developmental, Physiology and Biochemistry • Functional Genomics • Molecular Biology • Pest and Disease Management • Post Harvest Biology • Soil Science • Systems Biology
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