Article

Even low levels of tree cover improve dietary quality in West Africa

Details

Citation

den Braber B, Hall C, Brandt M, Reiner F, Mugabowindekwe M & Rasmussen LV (2024) Even low levels of tree cover improve dietary quality in West Africa. PNAS Nexus, 3 (2), Art. No.: pgae067. https://doi.org/10.1093/pnasnexus/pgae067

Abstract
Forests are attracting attention as a promising avenue to provide nutritious and “free” food without damaging the environment. Yet, we lack knowledge on the extent to which this holds in areas with sparse tree cover, such as in West Africa. This is largely due to the fact that existing methods are poorly designed to quantify tree cover in drylands. In this study, we estimate how various levels of tree cover across West Africa affect children's (aged 12–59 months) consumption of vitamin A–rich foods. We do so by combining detailed tree cover estimates based on PlanetScope imagery (3 m resolution) with Demographic Health Survey data from >15,000 households. We find that the probability of consuming vitamin A–rich foods increases from 0.45 to 0.53 with an increase in tree cover from the median value of 8.8 to 16.8% (which is the tree cover level at which the predicted probability of consuming vitamin A–rich foods is the highest). Moreover, we observe that the effects of tree cover vary across poverty levels and ecoregions. The poor are more likely than the non-poor to consume vitamin A–rich foods at low levels of tree cover in the lowland forest-savanna ecoregions, whereas the difference between poor and non-poor is less pronounced in the Sahel-Sudan. These results highlight the importance of trees and forests in sustainable food system transformation, even in areas with sparse tree cover.

Journal
PNAS Nexus: Volume 3, Issue 2

StatusPublished
FundersEuropean Commission (Horizon 2020)
Publication date28/02/2024
Publication date online28/02/2024
Date accepted by journal29/01/2024
PublisherOxford University Press (OUP)
ISSN2752-6542
eISSN2752-6542

People (1)

People

Dr Charlotte Hall

Dr Charlotte Hall

Lecturer in Environmental Geography, Biological and Environmental Sciences