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Regional Data Centres
Plant genetic diversity in the rice-based diet of rural Bangladesh
Bangladesh---
Dietary diversity is a fundamental tenet of nutrition in order to ensure adequate nutrient intakes,
yet few studies in developing countries have attempted to quantify patterns of consumption using
indicators of plant genetic diversity. Similarly, only limited efforts have been made to identify and
define available sources of dietary diversity within edible plant species, even though it is well
recognized that different cultivars have different nutrient composition.
In order to better document and quantify consumption of existing plant genetic diversity, two indicators
of plant genetic diversity were field tested in 313 households in rural Bangladesh using the 24-h recall method.
The two indicators of plant genetic diversity tested were cultivar diversity, defined in terms of the number
of cultivars available within a given species, and germplasm type by degree of modification defined as modern,
locally improved, traditional or unknown germplasm types.
Overall, the indicators performed well, providing a new dimension to dietary consumption data and
impetus to focus food composition research on intra-species variability. Over 80% of households were
able to identify rice by cultivar and 38 different cultivars were named. Consumption of modern rice
cultivars was six times greater than that of traditional cultivars. Application of these indicators in
future studies has potential utility within the fields of agro-biodiversity conservation and nutrition.
Reference: G. Kennedy, O. Islam, P. Eyzaguirre and S. Kennedy (2005). Field testing of plant genetic diversity
indicators for nutrition surveys: rice-based diet of rural Bangladesh as a model.
Journal of Food Composition and Analysis. Volume 18, Issue 4, Pages 255-268.
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