State Key Laboratory of Desert and Oasis Ecology, Xinjiang Institute of Ecology and Geography, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Urumqi 830011, China; University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China.
State Key Laboratory of Desert and Oasis Ecology, Xinjiang Institute of Ecology and Geography, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Urumqi 830011, China.
Sci Total Environ. 2020 Jun 1;719:137484. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.137484. Epub 2020 Feb 21.
Most studies have suggested that dietary choices have effects on both the environment and human health; however, they have ignored food culture, which is both an "independent variable" and a "dependent variable" of diet choice. The purpose of this study is to explore a diet optimization path that meets nutritional needs and has little impact on the environment, while respecting the local food culture to a large extent. We took China's Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region (hereinafter referred to as "Xinjiang") as the case area because Xinjiang is a multiethnic region with a unique food culture characterized by a high proportion of mutton in meat. According to the study's calculation, the current diet in Xinjiang has a high carbon footprint (CF), water footprint (WF) and ecological footprint (EF) and does not present the nutritional structure of a balanced diet. Considering the trade-offs among environmental carrying capacity, health and food culture is the challenge of changing the local food structure. With the method of multi-objective optimization, we propose "optimal diets", which show potential for mitigating environmental impacts and improving the state of health. Most importantly, one of the optimized diets is most desirable because it considers the preservation of the existing food culture. This study demonstrates the feasibility of providing a route for diet transformation that has double benefits regarding the environment and health, or even triple benefits regarding the environment, health and cultural acceptability.
大多数研究表明,饮食选择对环境和人类健康都有影响;然而,它们忽略了饮食选择的一个重要因素——食物文化,食物文化既是“自变量”,也是“因变量”。本研究旨在探索一条既能满足营养需求,又对环境影响较小,同时又能在很大程度上尊重当地食物文化的饮食优化路径。我们选择中国新疆维吾尔自治区(以下简称“新疆”)作为案例地区,因为新疆是一个多民族地区,其食物文化独具特色,肉类中羊肉的比例很高。根据研究计算,新疆目前的饮食结构碳足迹(CF)、水足迹(WF)和生态足迹(EF)都很高,且不符合均衡饮食的营养结构。考虑到环境承载能力、健康和食物文化之间的权衡取舍,是改变当地食物结构的挑战。本研究采用多目标优化方法,提出了“优化饮食”方案,该方案具有减轻环境影响和改善健康状况的潜力。最重要的是,其中一种优化饮食方案最具吸引力,因为它考虑到了现有食物文化的保护。本研究证明了提供一条既能在环境和健康方面带来双重效益,甚至在环境、健康和文化接受度方面带来三重效益的饮食转型途径是可行的。