Johns Hopkins Center for a Livable Future, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland, United States of America.
Department of Environmental Health & Engineering, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2024 Apr 16;19(4):e0296840. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0296840. eCollection 2024.
Kale is a nutrient-dense leafy vegetable associated with wide-ranging health benefits. It is tolerant of drought and temperature fluctuations, and could thus serve an increasingly important role in providing a safe and nutritious food supply during the climate crisis, while kale's ease of cultivation and ability to be grown in a wide range of soils make it a good fit for urban agriculture. In this pilot study we explored potential differences between kale grown at urban versus rural farms. We planted kale seedlings (Darkibor variety) at three urban and four rural farms in and around Baltimore City, Maryland, instructed farmers to cultivate them using their usual growing practices, harvested the kale from fields and points of distribution, and analyzed it for concentrations of carotenoids, vitamins C and K1, ten nutritional elements, and eight non-essential metals. Although sample sizes for some analyses were in some cases too small to produce statistically significant results, we identified potentially meaningful differences in concentrations of several components between urban and rural kale samples. Compared to urban samples, mean concentrations of carotenoids and vitamins were 22-38% higher in rural field samples. By contrast, mean concentrations for eight nutritional elements were higher in urban field samples by as much as 413% for iron. Compared to rural field samples, mean concentrations of nine non-essential metals were higher in urban samples, although lead and cadmium concentrations for all samples were below public health guidelines. Some urban-rural differences were more pronounced than those identified in prior research. For six elements, variance within urban and rural farms was greater than variance between urban and rural farms, suggesting urbanicity may not be the primary driver of some observed differences. For some nutrients, mean concentrations were higher than upper ranges reported in prior estimates, suggesting kale may have the potential to be more nutrient-dense than previously estimated. The nutritive and metals composition of this important crop, and the factors that influence it, merit continued investigation given its growing popularity.
羽衣甘蓝是一种营养丰富的绿叶蔬菜,具有广泛的健康益处。它耐旱、能适应温度波动,因此在气候危机期间,它可能在提供安全、营养的食物供应方面发挥越来越重要的作用,而羽衣甘蓝易于种植且能在多种土壤中生长的特点使其非常适合城市农业。在这项初步研究中,我们探讨了在城市和农村农场种植的羽衣甘蓝之间可能存在的差异。我们在马里兰州巴尔的摩市及其周边的三个城市和四个农村农场种植羽衣甘蓝幼苗(Darkibor 品种),指导农民按照他们通常的种植方式进行种植,从田地和分发点收获羽衣甘蓝,并分析其类胡萝卜素、维生素 C 和 K1、十种营养元素和八种非必需金属的浓度。虽然某些分析的样本量在某些情况下太小,无法得出具有统计学意义的结果,但我们发现城市和农村羽衣甘蓝样本中几种成分的浓度存在潜在的有意义差异。与城市样本相比,农村田间样本中类胡萝卜素和维生素的平均浓度高出 22-38%。相比之下,八种营养元素的平均浓度在城市田间样本中高出 413%,其中铁的平均浓度最高。与农村田间样本相比,城市样本中 9 种非必需金属的平均浓度更高,尽管所有样本的铅和镉浓度均低于公共卫生指南。一些城乡差异比以前的研究中发现的更为明显。对于六个元素,城市和农村农场内的方差大于城市和农村农场之间的方差,这表明城市性可能不是一些观察到的差异的主要驱动因素。对于一些营养素,平均浓度高于以前估计的上限,这表明羽衣甘蓝的营养成分可能比以前估计的更高。鉴于羽衣甘蓝越来越受欢迎,这种重要作物的营养成分和影响因素值得进一步研究。