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November 30, 2015

Opinion: How tasty forest foods can help solve the global hunger crisis

Healthier than meat, more resilient than crops. Credit: Erik Hersman, CC BY
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Healthier than meat, more resilient than crops. Credit: Erik Hersman, CC BY

About still suffer from hunger, with the majority living in Africa and Asia. The world's forests have great potential to improve their nutrition and ensure their livelihoods. In fact, forests could be essential to global food security, particularly when considering the importance of diverse, nutritionally-balanced diets.

Forests are key to protecting biodiversity, and for mitigating the effects of climate change. This is well known. However their contribution to alleviating hunger and improving nutrition has been somewhat neglected. A recent study by the , which I chaired, shows how forests and trees can complement agricultural production and give an economic boost to some of the world's most vulnerable regions.

Four ways forests benefit food security

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Close to one out of six people directly depend on forests , and it is important to recognise the rights of local people to these livelihood options. In the Sahel, for example, trees can contribute as much as 80% to household incomes, especially through shea nut production.

Novel initiatives are attempting to develop new tree commodities to supply the poor with sustainable incomes. For example, poor producers in Tanzania are engaged in a global effort to produce the , which yield an edible oil. A private–public partnership known as Novella Africa is developing a sustainable Allanblackia oil business that could be worth hundreds of millions of dollars annually for local farmers.

From forest to farm

Although forests are not a panacea for global hunger, they play a vital role in complementing crops produced on farms. This is especially important when the staple food supply is impaired by droughts, volatile prices, armed conflicts, or other crises.

While large-scale crop production remains important, it is highly vulnerable to extreme weather events, which may occur more frequently under climate change. Tree-based farming can to such calamities. During periods of food shortage triggered by such events, forest foods can provide a vital safety net, especially for the poorest households.

This -farm link also means that the loss and degradation of forests exacerbate the problem of food insecurity. Losing forests jeopardises "ecological services" such as a clean water supply, crucial for crop and livestock production. Managing landscapes on a multi-functional basis that combines food production, the maintenance of ecosystem services and other land use services should be at the forefront of efforts to achieve global .

In the lead up to the UN's finalisation of the later this year, the contribution of forests and tree-based systems to the "" needs to be emphasised. They can be managed to provide better and more nutritionally-balanced diets, greater control over inputs – particularly during lean seasons and periods of vulnerability (especially for marginalised groups) – and deliver ecosystem services for crop production. It will be a critical element of the responses to global hunger.

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