Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana IL, United States of America.
School of Informatics, Computing, and Cyber Systems, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff AZ, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2018 Jul 10;13(7):e0199498. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0199498. eCollection 2018.
Food flows underpin the complex food supply chains that are prevalent in our increasingly globalized world. Recently, much effort has been devoted to evaluating the resources (e.g. water, carbon, nutrients) embodied in food trade. Now, research is needed to understand the scientific principles of the food commodity flows that underpin these virtual resource transfers. How do food flows vary with spatial scale? To address this question, we present an empirical analysis of food commodity flow networks across the full spectrum of spatial scales: global, national, and village. We discover properties of both scale invariance and scale dependence in food flow networks. The statistical distribution of node connectivity and mass flux are consistent across scales. Node connectivity follows a generalized exponential distribution, while node mass flux follows a Gamma distribution across scales. Similarly, the relationship between node connectivity and mass flux follows a power law across scales. However, the parameters of the distributions change with spatial scale. Mean node connectivity and mass flux increase with increasing scale. A core group of nodes exists at all scales, but node centrality increases as the spatial scale decreases, indicating that some households are more critical to village food exchanges than countries are to global trade. Remarkably, the structural network properties of food flows are consistent across spatial scales, indicating that a universal mechanism may underpin food exchange systems. In future research, this understanding can be used to develop theoretical models of food flow networks and to model food flows at resolutions for which empirical information is not available.
食物流动是支撑我们日益全球化世界中复杂食品供应链的基础。最近,人们投入了大量精力来评估食品贸易中所蕴含的资源(如水、碳、营养物质)。现在,需要研究来理解支撑这些虚拟资源转移的食品商品流动的科学原理。食物流动如何随空间尺度而变化?为了解决这个问题,我们对全球、国家和村庄范围内的食品商品流动网络进行了全面的实证分析。我们发现食品流动网络具有尺度不变性和尺度依赖性的特性。节点连接度和物质通量的统计分布在各个尺度上都是一致的。节点连接度遵循广义指数分布,而节点物质通量则在各个尺度上遵循伽马分布。同样,节点连接度和物质通量之间的关系在各个尺度上也遵循幂律关系。然而,分布的参数随空间尺度而变化。平均节点连接度和物质通量随尺度的增加而增加。在所有尺度上都存在一个核心节点组,但随着空间尺度的减小,节点中心性增加,这表明在村庄的食品交换中,有些家庭比国家在全球贸易中更为关键。值得注意的是,食物流动的结构网络特性在各个空间尺度上是一致的,这表明可能存在一种普遍的机制来支撑食物交换系统。在未来的研究中,可以利用这种理解来开发食物流动网络的理论模型,并在没有经验信息的分辨率下对食物流动进行建模。