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Article

Trees on farms improve dietary quality in rural Malawi

Details

Citation

Hall CM, Den Braber B, Vansant E, Oldekop JA, Das U, Fielding D, Kamoto JFM & Rasmussen LV (2025) Trees on farms improve dietary quality in rural Malawi. Conservation Letters, 18 (1), Art. No.: e13061. https://doi.org/10.1111/conl.13061

Abstract
Trees on farms not only provide agricultural and environmental benefits but can also contribute to food security. We use panel data covering a 10-year period from the World Bank's Living Standards Measurement Study (LSMS) to examine the effects of trees on farms on people's dietary quality in rural Malawi. We found that having on-farm trees leads to higher and more diverse fruit and vegetable consumption. Specifically, households who had trees on their farm (or who acquired trees during the 10-year period) exhibited a 3% increase in vegetable consumption compared to households without trees. Moreover, for every additional tree species owned or acquired by a household during the study period, fruit consumption increased by 5%. These results demonstrate that trees on farms may play a role in meeting nutrition, conservation, and climate change mitigation goals, with important implications for sustainable development strategies in low- and middle-income countries.

Keywords
agroforestry; biodiversity conservation; dietary quality; nutrition; poverty alleviation; trees on farms

Journal
Conservation Letters: Volume 18, Issue 1

StatusPublished
Funders
Publication date online31/01/2025
Date accepted by journal23/09/2024
URL
PublisherWiley
eISSN1755-263X

People (1)

Dr Charlotte Hall

Dr Charlotte Hall

Lecturer in Environmental Geography, Biological and Environmental Sciences

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