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Review
. 2024 Apr 2;14(7):1077.
doi: 10.3390/ani14071077.

Improving Human Diets and Welfare through Using Herbivore-Based Foods: 1. Human and Animal Perspectives

Affiliations
Review

Improving Human Diets and Welfare through Using Herbivore-Based Foods: 1. Human and Animal Perspectives

John R Caradus et al. Animals (Basel). .

Abstract

Human health and diet are closely linked. The diversity of diets consumed by humans is remarkable, and most often incorporates both animal and plant-based foods. However, there has been a recent call for a reduced intake of animal-based foods due to concerns associated with human health in developed countries and perceived impacts on the environment. Yet, evidence for the superior nutritional quality of animal-sourced food such as meat, milk, and eggs, compared with plant-based foods, indicates that consumption of animal-sourced food should and will continue. This being the case, the aim here is to examine issues associated with animal-sourced foods in terms of both the quantification and mitigation of unintended consequences associated with environment, animal health, and herd management. Therefore, we examined the role of animal proteins in human societies with reference to the UN-FAO issues associated with animal-sourced foods. The emphasis is on dominant grazed pastoral-based systems, as used in New Zealand and Ireland, both with temperate moist climates and a similar reliance on global markets for generating net wealth from pastoral agricultural products. In conclusion, animal-sourced foods are shown to be an important part of the human diet. Production systems can result in unintended consequences associated with environment, animal health, and herd management, and there are technologies and systems to provide solutions to these that are available or under refinement.

Keywords: animal health; animal-based food; nutrition; plant-based food.

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Conflict of interest statement

John R. Caradus is employed by Grasslanz Technology Limited and is director of Grasslands Innovation Ltd. and Foundation for Arable Research; Jacqueline S. Rowarth is a Trustee of Lake Okoroire, a director of DairyNZ, Ravensdown Ltd., Deer IndustryNZ, Oraka Farming Ltd., and S&R DeerCo. The remaining author declares that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

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