| Literature DB >> 32198435 |
Darren R Grafius1,2, Jill L Edmondson3, Briony A Norton3,4, Rachel Clark3, Meghann Mears5, Jonathan R Leake3, Ron Corstanje6, Jim A Harris6, Philip H Warren3.
Abstract
There is increasing interest in urban food production for reasons of food security, environmental sustainability, social and health benefits. In developed nations urban food growing is largely informal and localised, in gardens, allotments and public spaces, but we know little about the magnitude of this production. Here we couple own-grown crop yield data with garden and allotment areal surveys and urban fruit tree occurrence to provide one of the first estimates for current and potential food production in a UK urban setting. Current production is estimated to be sufficient to supply the urban population with fruit and vegetables for about 30 days per year, while the most optimistic model results suggest that existing land cultivated for food could supply over half of the annual demand. Our findings provide a baseline for current production whilst highlighting the potential for change under the scaling up of cultivation on existing land.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32198435 PMCID: PMC7083843 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-62126-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Study area with locations and distribution of allotment sites and private residential gardens in Bedford, Luton and Milton Keynes, UK. Overview map contains UK Ordnance Survey data © Crown copyright and database right (2019).
Summary data derived from garden surveys in Leicester, Cardiff and Oxford[48] giving frequency and areas of garden either confirmed to be under cultivation for food production when surveyed, or recorded as having non-specific cultivated areas which could have been used for food production (these exclude cultivated areas confirmed to be non-food producing at the time of survey, e.g. flower beds).
| Number of gardens | Frequency (% of gardens) | Total surveyed area (m2) | Mean % area for all gardens | Mean % area for only gardens with either type of cultivation present | Mean, range & SD area (m2) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Confirmed food crop cultivation | 26 | 16.7% | 529.4 | 1.9% | 10.1% | 3.4 0–69 11.2 |
| Non-specific cultivation | 144 | 92.3% | 5516.0 | 19.6% | 21.9% | 35.6 0–188 36.9 |
| Total surveyed | 156 | — | 28083.8 | — | — | 180.0 14–1084 140.5 |
Figure 2Potential allotment, residential garden and fruit tree food production (Mg year−1) in Milton Keynes, Bedford and Luton, UK, under current and potential scenarios.
Total potential urban food production (Mg year−1), production density and per capita production in Milton Keynes, Bedford and Luton UK, under current and potential scenarios.
| Scenario | Mean Production | 25th percentile | 75th percentile | Mean Production Density | Mean Production per Capita |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 7950 | 6470 | 9330 | 435 | 13.4 |
| 2 | 32710 | 28070 | 36580 | 1787 | 55.0 |
| 3 | 47120 | 40640 | 52450 | 2575 | 79.2 |