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Pollinator Deficits, Food Consumption, and Consequences for Human Health: A Modeling Study

Animal pollination supports agricultural production for many healthy foods, such as fruits, vegetables, nuts, and legumes, that provide key nutrients and protect against noncommunicable disease. Today, most crops receive suboptimal pollination because of limited abundance and diversity of pollinating insects. Animal pollinators are currently suffering owing to a host of direct and indirect anthropogenic pressures: land-use change, intensive farming techniques, harmful pesticides, nutritional stress, and climate change, among others.

This study aimed to model the impacts on current global human health from insufficient pollination via diet. 

The results of the studey revealed that, globally 3%–5% of fruit, vegetable, and nut production is lost due to inadequate pollination, leading to an estimated 427,000 (95% uncertainty interval: 86,000, 691,000) excess deaths annually from lost healthy food consumption and associated diseases.

Title of publication: Environmental Health Perspective
Volumen: 130
N.0: 12
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Autor: Matthew R. Smith, Nathaniel D. Mueller, Marco Springmann, Timothy B. Sulser, Lucas A. Garibaldi, James Gerber, Keith Wiebe, and Samuel S. Myers
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Año: 2022
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Tipo: Artículo de revista especializada
Idioma utilizado para los contenidos: English
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