Effects of Agricultural Intensification on Mediterranean Diets: A Narrative Review

Author:

Hasanaliyeva Gultekin12ORCID,Sufar Enas Khalid2ORCID,Wang Juan23ORCID,Rempelos Leonidas24ORCID,Volakakis Nikolaos25,Iversen Per Ole67ORCID,Leifert Carlo68ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Animal, Rural and Environmental Sciences, Brackenhurst Campus, Nottingham Trent University, Nottinghamshire NG25 0QF, UK

2. Nafferton Ecological Farming Group, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 7RU, UK

3. Department of Clinical Nutrition, School of Medicine, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai 200025, China

4. Lincoln Institute for Agri-Food Technology, University of Lincoln, Lincoln LN2 2LG, UK

5. Geokomi Plc, P.O. Box 21, GR70200 Sivas Festos, Greece

6. Department of Nutrition, IMB, University of Oslo, 0317 Oslo, Norway

7. Department of Haematology, Oslo University Hospital, 0424 Oslo, Norway

8. SCU Plant Science, Southern Cross University, Military Rd., Lismore, NSW 2480, Australia

Abstract

Introduction: Mediterranean diets (MedDiets) are linked to substantial health benefits. However, there is also growing evidence that the intensification of food production over the last 60 years has resulted in nutritionally relevant changes in the composition of foods that may augment the health benefits of MedDiets. Objective: To synthesize, summarize, and critically evaluate the currently available evidence for changes in food composition resulting from agricultural intensification practices and their potential impact on the health benefits of MedDiets. Methods: We summarized/synthesized information from (i) systematic literature reviews/meta-analyses and more recently published articles on composition differences between conventional and organic foods, (ii) desk studies which compared food composition data from before and after agricultural intensification, (iii) recent retail and farm surveys and/or factorial field experiments that identified specific agronomic practices responsible for nutritionally relevant changes in food composition, and (iv) a recent systematic literature review and a small number of subsequently published observational and dietary intervention studies that investigated the potential health impacts of changes in food composition resulting from agricultural intensification. Results and Discussion: There has been growing evidence that the intensification of food production has resulted in (i) lower concentrations of nutritionally desirable compounds (e.g., phenolics, certain vitamins, mineral micronutrients including Se, Zn, and omega-3 fatty acids, α-tocopherol) and/or (ii) higher concentrations of nutritionally undesirable or toxic compounds (pesticide residues, cadmium, omega-6 fatty acids) in many of the foods (including wholegrain cereals, fruit and vegetables, olive oil, dairy products and meat from small ruminants, and fish) that are thought to contribute to the health benefits associated with MedDiets. The evidence for negative health impacts of consuming foods from intensified conventional production systems has also increased but is still limited and based primarily on evidence from observational studies. Limitations and gaps in the current evidence base are discussed. Conclusions: There is now substantial evidence that the intensification of agricultural food production has resulted in a decline in the nutritional quality of many of the foods that are recognized to contribute to the positive health impacts associated with adhering to traditional MedDiets. Further research is needed to quantify to what extent this decline augments the positive health impacts of adhering to a traditional MedDiet.

Funder

QualityLowInputFood Grant agreement

NUE-crops Grant agreement

HealthyMinorCereals Grant agreement

DEFRA LINK-project Better Organic Bread

DEFRA’s Sustainable Intensification Research Platform

Sheepdrove Trust

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Plant Science,Health Professions (miscellaneous),Health (social science),Microbiology,Food Science

Reference137 articles.

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4. Rempelos, L., Baranski, M., Wang, J., Adams, T.N., Adebusuyi, K., Beckman, J.J., Brockbank, C.J., Douglas, B.S., Feng, T., and Greenway, J.D. (2021). Integrated Soil and Crop Management in Organic Agriculture: A Logical Framework to Ensure Food Quality and Human Health?. Agronomy, 11.

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