Today's Produce May
Contain Fewer Nutrients
Compared to 50 years ago, today's fruits
and vegetables carry smaller amounts of some key nutrients, including
protein, calcium and vitamin C, according to new study findings.
"This is one more reason to eat
more fruits and vegetables," lead author Dr. Donald R. Davis stated.
"We have many reasons, but this is one of them."
Although there is probably more
than one explanation, the trend may be largely due to farmers
choosing to breed higher-yielding crops, Davis said.
Plants have a fixed amount of energy
they can spend, he said, and varieties with high yields may have
less energy to take minerals from the soil and transport them
around the plant or to synthesize vitamins and amino acids, which
make up proteins.
"Yield is not everything, and there
are trade-offs involved," said the researcher, who is based at
the University of Texas in Austin. "This is something we need
to become aware of as a society."
Previous research from the U.S.
and United Kingdom has suggested the nutrient content of fruits
and vegetables has declined in recent years. To investigate further,
Davis and his team compared the amounts of 13 key nutrients in
39 vegetables, 3 melons and strawberries in 1950 and 1999.
The investigators found that, overall,
vegetables and fruits contain less protein, calcium, phosphorus,
iron, riboflavin and vitamin C today than in 1950. The amount
of seven other nutrients was unchanged.
The amount of decline varied for
different nutrients, the authors report in the Journal of the
American College of Nutrition. For instance, protein fell by 6
percent, while riboflavin appeared to drop by 38 percent.
Davis said his group focused on
declines in nutrients across vegetables and fruits overall, rather
than on individual types of produce.
However, they found that celery,
green peppers and tomatoes appeared to have lost the largest amount
of protein, while phosphorus dropped most markedly in cantaloupe,
head lettuce and tomatoes. Eggplant and tomatoes appeared to have
lost the most vitamin C, he added.
SOURCE: Journal of the American
College of Nutrition, December 2004.
Reference
Source 89
Dec 14, 2004
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