...
首页> 外文期刊>The International Forestry Review >From foraging to farming among present-day forest hunter-gatherers: consequences on diet and health. (Special Issue: Forests, biodiversity and food security)
【24h】

From foraging to farming among present-day forest hunter-gatherers: consequences on diet and health. (Special Issue: Forests, biodiversity and food security)

机译:从当今的森林狩猎采集者中觅食到耕种:对饮食和健康的影响。 (特刊:森林,生物多样性和粮食安全)

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例
           

摘要

Throughout history, forests dwellers have adapted to permanent changes of forest ecosystems that, in essence, are dynamic. Accordingly, they have long served as models of how humans lived when their lifestyles and genetic endowment were complementary. What is now commonly described as the "paleodiet" tends to be put forward as a benchmark for present-day efforts to promote health and prevent nutritional diseases, even in industrialized countries. Although forest ecosystems provide food and medicines to forest dwellers, over the last half-century these ecosystems have undergone unprecedented pressure to make way for economic growth and industrialization, often at the cost of ecological functions that may affect human health, both in short term (i.e. increase in infectious diseases) and long term (incidence of global change). As radical alterations occur such as deforestation, modification of resource availability, and the penetration of cash economies, forest dwellers encounter increasing difficulties in accommodating their socioeconomic, cultural, and political systems, thus impeding their ecological success. Diets and diseases are sensitive indicators of the ecological and cultural costs that former hunter-gatherers currently pay to achieve their share of modernity. This paper exposes the nutritional and epidemiological consequences of the maladaptation of former hunter-gatherers in relation to their recent sedentarization. It is primarily based on case studies carried out among the Baka and Kola Pygmies of Cameroon, and the Tubu Punan of Borneo.Digital Object Identifier http://dx.doi.org/10.1505/146554811798293818
机译:纵观整个历史,森林居民已经适应了本质上是动态的森林生态系统的永久变化。因此,它们长期以来一直作为人类生活方式和遗传end赋互补时的生活方式的模型。如今,甚至在工业化国家中,通常被称为“古生物学”的人们往往被提出作为当今促进健康和预防营养疾病的努力的基准。尽管森林生态系统为森林居民提供食物和药品,但在过去的半个世纪中,这些生态系统承受了空前的压力,需要为经济增长和工业化让路,而这往往以可能在短期内影响人类健康的生态功能为代价(即传染病的增加)和长期的(全球变化的发生率)。由于发生了巨大的变化,例如森林砍伐,资源可利用性的改变以及现金经济的渗透,森林居民在适应其社会经济,文化和政治体系方面遇到越来越大的困难,从而阻碍了他们的生态成功。饮食和疾病是前狩猎者目前为实现其现代性所付出的生态和文化代价的敏感指标。本文揭示了前狩猎者和采集者的不适应与近期定居有关的营养和流行病学后果。它主要基于在喀麦隆的Baka和Kola y格米人以及婆罗洲的Tubu Punan之间进行的案例研究。数字对象标识符http://dx.doi.org/10.1505/146554811798293818

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号