Literature DB >> 26247703

Our landscapes, our livestock, ourselves: Restoring broken linkages among plants, herbivores, and humans with diets that nourish and satiate.

Frederick D Provenza1, Michel Meuret2, Pablo Gregorini3.   

Abstract

We contend that palates link herbivores and humans with landscapes and consider how these relationships have changed historically. An attuned palate, which enables herbivores to meet needs for nutrients and self-medicate to rectify maladies, evolves from three interrelated processes: flavor-feedback associations, availability of phytochemically rich foods, and learning in utero and early in life to eat nourishing combinations of foods. That occurs when wild or domestic herbivores forage on phytochemically rich landscapes, is less common when domestic herbivores forage on monoculture pastures, is close to zero for herbivores in feedlots, and is increasingly rare for people who forage in modern food outlets. Unlike our ancestors, the palates of many individuals are no longer linked in healthy ways with landscapes. Industrial farming and selection for yield, appearance, and transportability diminished the flavor, phytochemical richness, and nutritive value of fruits and vegetables for humans. Phytochemically impoverished pastures and feedlot diets can adversely affect the health of livestock and the flavor and nutritive value of meat and milk products for humans. While flavors of produce, meat, and dairy have become blander, processed foods have become more desirable as people have learned to link synthetic flavors with feedback from energy-rich compounds that obscure nutritional sameness and diminish health. Thus, the roles plants and animals once played in nutrition have been usurped by processed foods that are altered, fortified, and enriched in ways that can adversely affect appetitive states and food preferences. The need to amend foods, and to take nutrient supplements, could be reduced by creating phytochemically rich plants and herbivores and by creating cultures that know how to combine foods into meals that nourish and satiate.
Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Diet variety; Flavor-nutrient learning; Food culture; Food systems; Phytochemistry; Satiety

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26247703     DOI: 10.1016/j.appet.2015.08.004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Appetite        ISSN: 0195-6663            Impact factor:   3.868


  2 in total

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Authors:  Xin Jiang; Ling Wang
Journal:  Anim Nutr       Date:  2022-04-28

Review 2.  The Value of Native Plants and Local Production in an Era of Global Agriculture.

Authors:  Oren Shelef; Peter J Weisberg; Frederick D Provenza
Journal:  Front Plant Sci       Date:  2017-12-05       Impact factor: 6.627

  2 in total

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