The declining diversity of agricultural production and food supplies
worldwide may have important implications for global diets. The primary
objective of this review is to assess the nature and magnitude of the
associations of agricultural biodiversity with diet quality and
anthropometric outcomes in low- and middle-income countries. Agricultural biodiversity has a small
but consistent association with more diverse household- and
individual-level diets, although the magnitude of this association
varies with the extent of existing diversification of farms. Greater
on-farm crop species richness is also associated with small, positive
increments in young child linear stature. Agricultural diversification
may contribute to diversified diets through both subsistence- and
income-generating pathways and may be an important strategy for
improving diets and nutrition outcomes in low- and middle-income
countries.
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