Gallegos-Riofrío Carlos Andres, Waters William F, Carrasco Amaya, Riofrío Luis A, Pintag Mabel, Caranqui Martha, Caranqui Joaquín, BlackDeer Autumn Asher, Iannotti Lora L
Brown School, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO, USA.
Institute for Research in Health and Nutrition, Universidad San Francisco de Quito, Quito, Pichincha, Ecuador.
Curr Dev Nutr. 2021 May 13;5(Suppl 4):61-73. doi: 10.1093/cdn/nzab009. eCollection 2021 Jun.
To achieve a healthy sustainable food system globally, it is imperative to understand how local food systems can provide healthy and sustainable conditions.
To explore, through the indigenous community of Caliata in the Ecuadorian highlands, the factors that support or hinder sustainable Andean food systems.
We designed a participatory mixed-methods study in Caliata (Chimborazo, Ecuador) and an inclusive and transdisciplinary research process with constant member checking. The study combined culturally validated qualitative methods ( = 49), agroecology-based site analysis, and household surveys ( = 57), including a modified 48-h recall. We used the NOVA food classification system to categorize the diet according to levels of processing and analyzed categorical and numeric data to understand the interplay of parcel size, agrodiversity, and diet diversity.
First, the agroecological space is defined by the stewardship of Pachamama (Mother Nature), a central role in Andean cosmovision, leading to trophic interactions and cycles characterized by a diversity of heterarchical social organizations and agroecologically useful species. Second, consistency was found in dietary patterns; all respondents consume their produce, fruits being the most popular snack (in a 24-h period, 70% reported an average of 2.2 servings), and two-thirds of households' consumption represent unprocessed or minimally processed foods. Third, gendered agriculture and population aging represent demographic challenges, while chronic health problems remain relatively infrequent compared with the general population. Fourth, food sovereignty is an ecocentric concept based on production, exchanges of seeds and produce, consumption of produce, and knowledge of how agroecological space is treated. This system represents a nutrient loop tied to a system of knowledge about how to care for soil, land, and the ecological community.
Caliata provides important perspectives on linkages between diet, biodiversity, use of agroecological space, and rural-urban dynamics. This small indigenous community offers lessons for achieving both healthy ecosystems and food security.
为在全球实现健康可持续的粮食系统,必须了解地方粮食系统如何能提供健康且可持续的条件。
通过厄瓜多尔高地卡利亚塔的原住民社区,探究支持或阻碍安第斯可持续粮食系统的因素。
我们在卡利亚塔(厄瓜多尔钦博拉索省)设计了一项参与式混合方法研究,并采用了持续成员核对的包容性跨学科研究过程。该研究结合了经过文化验证的定性方法(n = 49)、基于农业生态学的实地分析以及家庭调查(n = 57),包括改良的48小时膳食回顾。我们使用新食物分类系统根据加工程度对饮食进行分类,并分析分类数据和数值数据,以了解地块规模、农业多样性和饮食多样性之间的相互作用。
首先,农业生态空间由帕查玛玛(大自然母亲)管理界定,这在安第斯宇宙观中具有核心作用,导致营养相互作用和循环,其特点是存在多样化的异层级社会组织和具有农业生态用途的物种。其次,在饮食模式上发现了一致性;所有受访者都食用自家生产的食物,水果是最受欢迎的零食(在24小时内,70%的受访者报告平均食用2.2份),并且三分之二家庭的消费为未加工或最少加工的食物。第三,性别化农业和人口老龄化构成人口挑战,而与普通人群相比,慢性健康问题相对较少。第四,粮食主权是一个以生态为中心的概念,基于生产、种子和农产品交换、农产品消费以及如何对待农业生态空间的知识。这个系统代表了一个与关于如何照料土壤、土地和生态群落的知识体系相关的营养循环。
卡利亚塔为饮食、生物多样性、农业生态空间利用和城乡动态之间的联系提供了重要视角。这个小型原住民社区为实现健康生态系统和粮食安全提供了经验教训。