INVESTIGADORES
BEGUELIN Marien
artículos
Título:
From Local Farms to Supermarket Foods: The Story of the Homogenization of the Argentine Diet Told by the Isotope Ratios of Modern Teeth
Autor/es:
OTERO, FELIPE; LOUPIAS, LUCIANO LAUTARO; MANCINI, LUIS HENRIQUE; BAHNIUK R, ANELIZE MANUELA; BÉGUELIN, MARIEN; VALENZUELA, LUCIANO OSCAR
Revista:
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN BIOLOGY
Editorial:
WILEY-LISS, DIV JOHN WILEY & SONS INC
Referencias:
Lugar: New York; Año: 2024
ISSN:
1042-0533
Resumen:
Objectives: Nutritional changes over the last century, driven by globalization, hypermarketization, and malnutrition, are global in scale. Large countries in the Global South might be resilient to dietary homogenization due to their natural diversity of regions and ecosystems, which might have prevented the adoption of supermarket diets. Argentina has a wide array of ecosystems and historically different subsistence diets dependent on regional characteristics. We analyzed the spatiotemporal variation of stable isotope values in Argentina using modern teeth to test for regional dietary patterns and its consistence over time.Materials and Methods: We collected teeth from voluntary donors born between 1940 and 2010, from 72 locations across Argentina. A total of 119 teeth were analyzed for the markers δ13 C dentine , δ13 C enamel , δ15 N, and δ34 S. A reconstruction of isotopicniches was performed to estimate dietary patterns across different regions and time periods.Results: This study is the first to analyze changes in modern dietary patterns in Argentina using isotopic data measured in contemporary teeth. We showed latitudinal, longitudinal, and temporal differences in isotopic values, reflecting the variation in available resources within the country. Changes in the diet were observed over time, including declining δ15 N values, a reduction in δ34 S range, and a trend toward homogenization of δ13 C enamel values. Conversely, δ13 C dentine values remained constant over time, maintaining latitudinal patterns and regional differences across regions.Discussion: This study increases our understanding of modern population dietary patterns both spatially and over the last 70 years. Our findings suggest that the Argentine population has shifted toward a supermarket diet in recent years.