Dietary heterogeneity among Western industrialized countries reflected in the stable isotope ratios of human hair.

Although the globalization of food production is often assumed to result in a homogenization of consumption patterns with a convergence towards a Western style diet, the resources used to make global food products may still be locally produced (glocalization). Stable isotope ratios of human hair can...

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Main Authors: Luciano O Valenzuela, Lesley A Chesson, Gabriel J Bowen, Thure E Cerling, James R Ehleringer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/22479574/?tool=EBI
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spelling doaj-29ee9bde23704527bc9b711ab481b7ff2021-03-03T20:29:45ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-0173e3423410.1371/journal.pone.0034234Dietary heterogeneity among Western industrialized countries reflected in the stable isotope ratios of human hair.Luciano O ValenzuelaLesley A ChessonGabriel J BowenThure E CerlingJames R EhleringerAlthough the globalization of food production is often assumed to result in a homogenization of consumption patterns with a convergence towards a Western style diet, the resources used to make global food products may still be locally produced (glocalization). Stable isotope ratios of human hair can quantify the extent to which residents of industrialized nations have converged on a standardized diet or whether there is persistent heterogeneity and glocalization among countries as a result of different dietary patterns and the use of local food products. Here we report isotopic differences among carbon, nitrogen and sulfur isotope ratios of human hair collected in thirteen Western European countries and in the USA. European hair samples had significantly lower δ(13)C values (-22.7 to -18.3‰), and significantly higher δ(15)N (7.8 to 10.3‰) and δ(34)S (4.8 to 8.3‰) values than samples from the USA (δ(13)C: -21.9 to -15.0‰, δ(15)N: 6.7 to 9.9‰, δ(34)S: -1.2 to 9.9‰). Within Europe, we detected differences in hair δ(13)C and δ(34)S values among countries and covariation of isotope ratios with latitude and longitude. This geographic structuring of isotopic data suggests heterogeneity in the food resources used by citizens of industrialized nations and supports the presence of different dietary patterns within Western Europe despite globalization trends. Here we showed the potential of stable isotope analysis as a population-wide tool for dietary screening, particularly as a complement of dietary surveys, that can provide additional information on assimilated macronutrients and independent verification of data obtained by those self-reporting instruments.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/22479574/?tool=EBI
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Luciano O Valenzuela
Lesley A Chesson
Gabriel J Bowen
Thure E Cerling
James R Ehleringer
spellingShingle Luciano O Valenzuela
Lesley A Chesson
Gabriel J Bowen
Thure E Cerling
James R Ehleringer
Dietary heterogeneity among Western industrialized countries reflected in the stable isotope ratios of human hair.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Luciano O Valenzuela
Lesley A Chesson
Gabriel J Bowen
Thure E Cerling
James R Ehleringer
author_sort Luciano O Valenzuela
title Dietary heterogeneity among Western industrialized countries reflected in the stable isotope ratios of human hair.
title_short Dietary heterogeneity among Western industrialized countries reflected in the stable isotope ratios of human hair.
title_full Dietary heterogeneity among Western industrialized countries reflected in the stable isotope ratios of human hair.
title_fullStr Dietary heterogeneity among Western industrialized countries reflected in the stable isotope ratios of human hair.
title_full_unstemmed Dietary heterogeneity among Western industrialized countries reflected in the stable isotope ratios of human hair.
title_sort dietary heterogeneity among western industrialized countries reflected in the stable isotope ratios of human hair.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Although the globalization of food production is often assumed to result in a homogenization of consumption patterns with a convergence towards a Western style diet, the resources used to make global food products may still be locally produced (glocalization). Stable isotope ratios of human hair can quantify the extent to which residents of industrialized nations have converged on a standardized diet or whether there is persistent heterogeneity and glocalization among countries as a result of different dietary patterns and the use of local food products. Here we report isotopic differences among carbon, nitrogen and sulfur isotope ratios of human hair collected in thirteen Western European countries and in the USA. European hair samples had significantly lower δ(13)C values (-22.7 to -18.3‰), and significantly higher δ(15)N (7.8 to 10.3‰) and δ(34)S (4.8 to 8.3‰) values than samples from the USA (δ(13)C: -21.9 to -15.0‰, δ(15)N: 6.7 to 9.9‰, δ(34)S: -1.2 to 9.9‰). Within Europe, we detected differences in hair δ(13)C and δ(34)S values among countries and covariation of isotope ratios with latitude and longitude. This geographic structuring of isotopic data suggests heterogeneity in the food resources used by citizens of industrialized nations and supports the presence of different dietary patterns within Western Europe despite globalization trends. Here we showed the potential of stable isotope analysis as a population-wide tool for dietary screening, particularly as a complement of dietary surveys, that can provide additional information on assimilated macronutrients and independent verification of data obtained by those self-reporting instruments.
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/22479574/?tool=EBI
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