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Drivers of nutrient intakes from fisheries in French Polynesia

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Drivers of nutrient intakes from fisheries in French Polynesia. / Hamilton, Mark; Maire, Eva; Monteil, Charlotte et al.
In: Ecosystems and People, Vol. 20, No. 1, 2351385, 31.12.2024.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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APA

Hamilton, M., Maire, E., Monteil, C., Vane, V., Graham, N. A. J., Brun, V., Robinson, J. P. W., Claudet, J., Parravicini, V., & Hicks, C. C. (2024). Drivers of nutrient intakes from fisheries in French Polynesia. Ecosystems and People, 20(1), Article 2351385. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1080/26395916.2024.2351385

Vancouver

Hamilton M, Maire E, Monteil C, Vane V, Graham NAJ, Brun V et al. Drivers of nutrient intakes from fisheries in French Polynesia. Ecosystems and People. 2024 Dec 31;20(1):2351385. Epub 2024 May 23. doi: 10.1080/26395916.2024.2351385

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Bibtex

@article{c016069266de406789a8e69e2137de79,
title = "Drivers of nutrient intakes from fisheries in French Polynesia",
abstract = "Small-scale fisheries provide nutrients to hundreds of millions of people worldwide, with yields dependent on the condition of marine habitats such as coral reefs. Small-scale fisheries are a particularly important food source in societies with nutrient deficiencies and where unhealthy food alternatives are widely available. Using data from coral reef surveys around two islands in French Polynesia (Moorea and Raiatea), we show how the availability of nutrients to fisheries changed in relation to the condition of coral habitat. Fish biomass and nutrient availability were highest when coral cover was low around both islands, driven predominantly by abundant herbivorous reef fish. We also investigated the importance of fish in people{\textquoteright}s diets, to determine if fish consumption was aligned with available fisheries resources on local reefs and if nutrient intakes from fish could be explained by people{\textquoteright}s socioeconomic background. People ate a higher diversity of reef fish in Raiatea, however nutrient intakes from fish were higher in Moorea. Most people ate more fish than meat on both islands, however fish consumption declined over generations. People from fishing households had higher nutrient intakes from reef and pelagic fish, and people from farming households had higher intakes from reef fish. Preference for eating reef fish over pelagic fish was also associated with higher total nutrient intakes. Promoting traditional diets rich in fish could be key to meeting people{\textquoteright}s nutritional needs in French Polynesia while reducing diet-related health issues linked to the overconsumption of fat. French and Tahitian versions of the Abstract are available in Supplementary Material.",
keywords = "Moorea, Raiatea, Sebastian Villasante, Small-scale fisheries, coral reefs, marine resources, nutrition",
author = "Mark Hamilton and Eva Maire and Charlotte Monteil and Vainehu Vane and Graham, {Nicholas A. J.} and Victor Brun and Robinson, {James P. W.} and Joachim Claudet and Valeriano Parravicini and Hicks, {Christina C.}",
year = "2024",
month = may,
day = "23",
doi = "10.1080/26395916.2024.2351385",
language = "English",
volume = "20",
journal = "Ecosystems and People",
issn = "2639-5908",
publisher = "Informa UK Limited",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Drivers of nutrient intakes from fisheries in French Polynesia

AU - Hamilton, Mark

AU - Maire, Eva

AU - Monteil, Charlotte

AU - Vane, Vainehu

AU - Graham, Nicholas A. J.

AU - Brun, Victor

AU - Robinson, James P. W.

AU - Claudet, Joachim

AU - Parravicini, Valeriano

AU - Hicks, Christina C.

PY - 2024/5/23

Y1 - 2024/5/23

N2 - Small-scale fisheries provide nutrients to hundreds of millions of people worldwide, with yields dependent on the condition of marine habitats such as coral reefs. Small-scale fisheries are a particularly important food source in societies with nutrient deficiencies and where unhealthy food alternatives are widely available. Using data from coral reef surveys around two islands in French Polynesia (Moorea and Raiatea), we show how the availability of nutrients to fisheries changed in relation to the condition of coral habitat. Fish biomass and nutrient availability were highest when coral cover was low around both islands, driven predominantly by abundant herbivorous reef fish. We also investigated the importance of fish in people’s diets, to determine if fish consumption was aligned with available fisheries resources on local reefs and if nutrient intakes from fish could be explained by people’s socioeconomic background. People ate a higher diversity of reef fish in Raiatea, however nutrient intakes from fish were higher in Moorea. Most people ate more fish than meat on both islands, however fish consumption declined over generations. People from fishing households had higher nutrient intakes from reef and pelagic fish, and people from farming households had higher intakes from reef fish. Preference for eating reef fish over pelagic fish was also associated with higher total nutrient intakes. Promoting traditional diets rich in fish could be key to meeting people’s nutritional needs in French Polynesia while reducing diet-related health issues linked to the overconsumption of fat. French and Tahitian versions of the Abstract are available in Supplementary Material.

AB - Small-scale fisheries provide nutrients to hundreds of millions of people worldwide, with yields dependent on the condition of marine habitats such as coral reefs. Small-scale fisheries are a particularly important food source in societies with nutrient deficiencies and where unhealthy food alternatives are widely available. Using data from coral reef surveys around two islands in French Polynesia (Moorea and Raiatea), we show how the availability of nutrients to fisheries changed in relation to the condition of coral habitat. Fish biomass and nutrient availability were highest when coral cover was low around both islands, driven predominantly by abundant herbivorous reef fish. We also investigated the importance of fish in people’s diets, to determine if fish consumption was aligned with available fisheries resources on local reefs and if nutrient intakes from fish could be explained by people’s socioeconomic background. People ate a higher diversity of reef fish in Raiatea, however nutrient intakes from fish were higher in Moorea. Most people ate more fish than meat on both islands, however fish consumption declined over generations. People from fishing households had higher nutrient intakes from reef and pelagic fish, and people from farming households had higher intakes from reef fish. Preference for eating reef fish over pelagic fish was also associated with higher total nutrient intakes. Promoting traditional diets rich in fish could be key to meeting people’s nutritional needs in French Polynesia while reducing diet-related health issues linked to the overconsumption of fat. French and Tahitian versions of the Abstract are available in Supplementary Material.

KW - Moorea

KW - Raiatea

KW - Sebastian Villasante

KW - Small-scale fisheries

KW - coral reefs

KW - marine resources

KW - nutrition

U2 - 10.1080/26395916.2024.2351385

DO - 10.1080/26395916.2024.2351385

M3 - Journal article

VL - 20

JO - Ecosystems and People

JF - Ecosystems and People

SN - 2639-5908

IS - 1

M1 - 2351385

ER -