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Pollinator Deficits, Food Consumption, and Consequences for Human Health: A Modeling Study

BACKGROUND: Animal pollination supports agricultural production for many healthy foods, such as fruits, vegetables, nuts, and legumes, that provide key nutrients and protect against noncommunicable disease. Today, most crops receive suboptimal pollination because of limited abundance and diversity o...

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Autores principales: Smith, Matthew R., Mueller, Nathaniel D., Springmann, Marco, Sulser, Timothy B., Garibaldi, Lucas A., Gerber, James, Wiebe, Keith, Myers, Samuel S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Environmental Health Perspectives 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9749483/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36515549
http://dx.doi.org/10.1289/EHP10947
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author Smith, Matthew R.
Mueller, Nathaniel D.
Springmann, Marco
Sulser, Timothy B.
Garibaldi, Lucas A.
Gerber, James
Wiebe, Keith
Myers, Samuel S.
author_facet Smith, Matthew R.
Mueller, Nathaniel D.
Springmann, Marco
Sulser, Timothy B.
Garibaldi, Lucas A.
Gerber, James
Wiebe, Keith
Myers, Samuel S.
author_sort Smith, Matthew R.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Animal pollination supports agricultural production for many healthy foods, such as fruits, vegetables, nuts, and legumes, that provide key nutrients and protect against noncommunicable disease. Today, most crops receive suboptimal pollination because of limited abundance and diversity of pollinating insects. Animal pollinators are currently suffering owing to a host of direct and indirect anthropogenic pressures: land-use change, intensive farming techniques, harmful pesticides, nutritional stress, and climate change, among others. OBJECTIVES: We aimed to model the impacts on current global human health from insufficient pollination via diet. METHODS: We used a climate zonation approach to estimate current yield gaps for animal-pollinated foods and estimated the proportion of the gap attributable to insufficient pollinators based on existing research. We then simulated closing the “pollinator yield gaps” by eliminating the portion of total yield gaps attributable to insufficient pollination. Next, we used an agriculture–economic model to estimate the impacts of closing the pollinator yield gap on food production, interregional trade, and consumption. Finally, we used a comparative risk assessment to estimate the related changes in dietary risks and mortality by country and globally. In addition, we estimated the lost economic value of crop production for three diverse case-study countries: Honduras, Nepal, and Nigeria. RESULTS: Globally, we calculated that 3%–5% of fruit, vegetable, and nut production is lost due to inadequate pollination, leading to an estimated 427,000 (95% uncertainty interval: 86,000, 691,000) excess deaths annually from lost healthy food consumption and associated diseases. Modeled impacts were unevenly distributed: Lost food production was concentrated in lower-income countries, whereas impacts on food consumption and mortality attributable to insufficient pollination were greater in middle- and high-income countries with higher rates of noncommunicable disease. Furthermore, in our three case-study countries, we calculated the economic value of crop production to be 12%–31% lower than if pollinators were abundant (due to crop production losses of 3%–19%), mainly due to lost fruit and vegetable production. DISCUSSION: According to our analysis, insufficient populations of pollinators were responsible for large present-day burdens of disease through lost healthy food consumption. In addition, we calculated that low-income countries lost significant income and crop yields from pollinator deficits. These results underscore the urgent need to promote pollinator-friendly practices for both human health and agricultural livelihoods. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP10947
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spelling pubmed-97494832022-12-15 Pollinator Deficits, Food Consumption, and Consequences for Human Health: A Modeling Study Smith, Matthew R. Mueller, Nathaniel D. Springmann, Marco Sulser, Timothy B. Garibaldi, Lucas A. Gerber, James Wiebe, Keith Myers, Samuel S. Environ Health Perspect Research BACKGROUND: Animal pollination supports agricultural production for many healthy foods, such as fruits, vegetables, nuts, and legumes, that provide key nutrients and protect against noncommunicable disease. Today, most crops receive suboptimal pollination because of limited abundance and diversity of pollinating insects. Animal pollinators are currently suffering owing to a host of direct and indirect anthropogenic pressures: land-use change, intensive farming techniques, harmful pesticides, nutritional stress, and climate change, among others. OBJECTIVES: We aimed to model the impacts on current global human health from insufficient pollination via diet. METHODS: We used a climate zonation approach to estimate current yield gaps for animal-pollinated foods and estimated the proportion of the gap attributable to insufficient pollinators based on existing research. We then simulated closing the “pollinator yield gaps” by eliminating the portion of total yield gaps attributable to insufficient pollination. Next, we used an agriculture–economic model to estimate the impacts of closing the pollinator yield gap on food production, interregional trade, and consumption. Finally, we used a comparative risk assessment to estimate the related changes in dietary risks and mortality by country and globally. In addition, we estimated the lost economic value of crop production for three diverse case-study countries: Honduras, Nepal, and Nigeria. RESULTS: Globally, we calculated that 3%–5% of fruit, vegetable, and nut production is lost due to inadequate pollination, leading to an estimated 427,000 (95% uncertainty interval: 86,000, 691,000) excess deaths annually from lost healthy food consumption and associated diseases. Modeled impacts were unevenly distributed: Lost food production was concentrated in lower-income countries, whereas impacts on food consumption and mortality attributable to insufficient pollination were greater in middle- and high-income countries with higher rates of noncommunicable disease. Furthermore, in our three case-study countries, we calculated the economic value of crop production to be 12%–31% lower than if pollinators were abundant (due to crop production losses of 3%–19%), mainly due to lost fruit and vegetable production. DISCUSSION: According to our analysis, insufficient populations of pollinators were responsible for large present-day burdens of disease through lost healthy food consumption. In addition, we calculated that low-income countries lost significant income and crop yields from pollinator deficits. These results underscore the urgent need to promote pollinator-friendly practices for both human health and agricultural livelihoods. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP10947 Environmental Health Perspectives 2022-12-14 /pmc/articles/PMC9749483/ /pubmed/36515549 http://dx.doi.org/10.1289/EHP10947 Text en https://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/about-ehp/licenseEHP is an open-access journal published with support from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, National Institutes of Health. All content is public domain unless otherwise noted.
spellingShingle Research
Smith, Matthew R.
Mueller, Nathaniel D.
Springmann, Marco
Sulser, Timothy B.
Garibaldi, Lucas A.
Gerber, James
Wiebe, Keith
Myers, Samuel S.
Pollinator Deficits, Food Consumption, and Consequences for Human Health: A Modeling Study
title Pollinator Deficits, Food Consumption, and Consequences for Human Health: A Modeling Study
title_full Pollinator Deficits, Food Consumption, and Consequences for Human Health: A Modeling Study
title_fullStr Pollinator Deficits, Food Consumption, and Consequences for Human Health: A Modeling Study
title_full_unstemmed Pollinator Deficits, Food Consumption, and Consequences for Human Health: A Modeling Study
title_short Pollinator Deficits, Food Consumption, and Consequences for Human Health: A Modeling Study
title_sort pollinator deficits, food consumption, and consequences for human health: a modeling study
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9749483/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36515549
http://dx.doi.org/10.1289/EHP10947
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