Almost every ecosystem has been amended so that plants and animals can be used as food, fibre, fodder, medicines, traps and weapons. Historically, wild plants and animals were sole dietary components for hunter–gatherer and forager cultures. Today, they remain key to many agricultural communities. The mean use of wild foods by agricultural and forager communities in 22 countries of Asia and Africa (36 studies) is 90–100 species per location. Aggregate country estimates can reach 300–800 species (e.g. India, Ethiopia, Kenya). The mean use of wild species is 120 per community for indigenous communities in both industrialized and developing countries. Many of these wild foods are actively managed, suggesting there is a false dichotomy around i...
Around ten thousand years ago, people around the globe began domesticating plants and animals. Peopl...
The ethnobiology of wild foods has received increasing attention within the scientific arena in rece...
There is growing recognition of the contribution of wild foods to local diets, nutrition, and cultur...
Wild food constitutes a substantial part of household food consumption around the world, but rapid l...
Domestication of new plants is one of the key (ongoing) phenomena in the history of agriculture. Wil...
Agricultural societies partly depend upon wild foods. Relationships between an agricultural society ...
The United Nations adopted the Millennium Declaration of September 2009 to improve the global living...
Many wild edible species are disappearing due to environmental pressures or to neglect as population...
Rural populations in developing countries face food insecurity and malnutrition despite being surrou...
It is worth raising the question, why are wild edible plants (WEPs) which are rich in diverse nutrie...
Rural populations in developing countries face food insecurity and malnutrition despite being surrou...
Wild edible plants are of great importance in both former and current human societies. Their use emb...
Türkiye represents one of the world’s biodiversity hotspots, containing over 11,000 species of plant...
The growing world population exerts tremendous pressure on our finite food resources. Since the lion...
Wild food plants (WFPs) are often highly nutritious but under-consumed at the same time. This study ...
Around ten thousand years ago, people around the globe began domesticating plants and animals. Peopl...
The ethnobiology of wild foods has received increasing attention within the scientific arena in rece...
There is growing recognition of the contribution of wild foods to local diets, nutrition, and cultur...
Wild food constitutes a substantial part of household food consumption around the world, but rapid l...
Domestication of new plants is one of the key (ongoing) phenomena in the history of agriculture. Wil...
Agricultural societies partly depend upon wild foods. Relationships between an agricultural society ...
The United Nations adopted the Millennium Declaration of September 2009 to improve the global living...
Many wild edible species are disappearing due to environmental pressures or to neglect as population...
Rural populations in developing countries face food insecurity and malnutrition despite being surrou...
It is worth raising the question, why are wild edible plants (WEPs) which are rich in diverse nutrie...
Rural populations in developing countries face food insecurity and malnutrition despite being surrou...
Wild edible plants are of great importance in both former and current human societies. Their use emb...
Türkiye represents one of the world’s biodiversity hotspots, containing over 11,000 species of plant...
The growing world population exerts tremendous pressure on our finite food resources. Since the lion...
Wild food plants (WFPs) are often highly nutritious but under-consumed at the same time. This study ...
Around ten thousand years ago, people around the globe began domesticating plants and animals. Peopl...
The ethnobiology of wild foods has received increasing attention within the scientific arena in rece...
There is growing recognition of the contribution of wild foods to local diets, nutrition, and cultur...