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Effect of trade on global aquatic food consumption patterns
Summary
Researchers analyzed seafood trade data from 174 countries between 1976 and 2019 and found that while global per-person seafood consumption has risen, the average trophic level of what people eat is declining — meaning diets are shifting toward farm-raised, lower-trophic species like shrimp and tilapia rather than wild-caught fish. Trade was found to increase both the availability and diversity of seafood in over 60% of countries, reducing geographic inequality in diet quality.
Globalization of fishery products is playing a significant role in shaping the harvesting and use of aquatic foods, but a vigorous debate has focused on whether the trade is a driver of the inequitable distribution of aquatic foods. Here, we develop species-level mass balance and trophic level identification datasets for 174 countries and territories to analyze global aquatic food consumption patterns, trade characteristics, and impacts from 1976 to 2019. We find that per capita consumption of aquatic foods has increased significantly at the global scale, but the human aquatic food trophic level (HATL), i.e., the average trophic level of aquatic food items in the human diet, is declining (from 3.42 to 3.18) because of the considerable increase in low-trophic level aquaculture species output relative to that of capture fisheries since 1976. Moreover, our study finds that trade has contributed to increasing the availability and trophic level of aquatic foods in >60% of the world's countries. Trade has also reduced geographic differences in the HATL among countries over recent decades. We suggest that there are important opportunities to widen the current focus on productivity gains and economic outputs to a more equitable global distribution of aquatic foods.
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