Article

Linking agroecosystems producing farmed seafood with food security and health status to better address the nutritional challenges in Bangladesh

Details

Citation

de Roos B, Roos N, Mamun A, Ahmed T, Sneddon AA, Murray F, Grieve E & Little DC (2019) Linking agroecosystems producing farmed seafood with food security and health status to better address the nutritional challenges in Bangladesh. Public Health Nutrition, 22 (16), pp. 2941-2949. https://doi.org/10.1017/s1368980019002295

Abstract
Objective: Aquaculture is one of the fastest-growing food production sectors in many low-income and food-deficit countries with aquatic ecozones. Yet its specific impact on nutrition and livelihood in local communities, where commercial and/or export-orientated aquaculture activities are developed, is largely unknown. Design: The present narrative and argumentative review aims to provide an overview of our current understanding of the connections between aquaculture agro-ecosystems, local and national fish production, fish consumption patterns and nutrition and health outcomes. Results: The agroecological dynamic in a coastal-estuarine zone, where the aquatic environment ranges from fully saline to freshwater, is complex, with seasonal and annual fluctuations in freshwater supply creating a variable salinity gradient which impacts on aquatic food production and on food production more generally. The local communities living in these dynamic aquatic ecozones are vulnerable to poverty , poor diet and health, while these ecosystems produce highly valuable and nutritious aquatic foods. Policies addressing the specific challenges of risk management of these communities are limited by the sectoral separation of aquatic food production-the fisheries and aquaculture sector, the broader food sector-and public health institutions. Conclusions: Here we provide an argument for the integration of these factors to improve aquaculture value chains to better address the nutritional challenges in Bangladesh.

Keywords
Nutrition and Dietetics; Agrosystems; Aquaculture; Low-income and food-deficit countries; Food security; Nutritional status; Bangladesh

Journal
Public Health Nutrition: Volume 22, Issue 16

StatusPublished
Publication date30/11/2019
Publication date online05/09/2019
Date accepted by journal22/05/2019
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/30133
PublisherCambridge University Press (CUP)
ISSN1368-9800
eISSN1475-2727

People (1)

Professor Dave Little

Professor Dave Little

Professor, Institute of Aquaculture

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