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The bioavailability of carbohydrates, protein and fat, the so-called macronutrients, is usually very high at more than 90% of the amount consumed. Micronutrients, i.e. vitamins and minerals, and bioactive phytochemicals (e.g. flavonoids, carotenoids) can however vary widely in the extent they are utilised and absorbed (EUFIC).
In 2.2. Bioavailability: Figure 2.2 the pathway that micronutrients follow from the soil through the crop and food into the human body is shown. Several critical factors determine the success of cultivation practices to improve micronutrient status among humans. These factors depend on nutrient bioavailability at different stages: the presence and bioavailability of soil nutrients for plant uptake, nutrient allocation within the plant, re-translocation into the harvested food and availability of nutrients in prepared food for uptake in the human body (de Valença and Bake 2016).
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Bioavailability from soil to crop is influenced by both many soil factors and the crop variety (genotype), while the bioavailability from crop to food is influenced by the crop variety (which, amongst others, defines the allocation and re-localization of nutrients into the edible parts of the crop) as well as the processing of the harvested part (i.e. milling and dehusking of rice). Storage additionally influences micronutrient content. These two forms of bioavailability will be further explained in Chapter 5 and §5.3 specifically.
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Referencesde Valença AW, Bake A. 2016. Micronutrient management for improving harvests, human nutrition, and the environment. : 21. European Food Information Council. (n.d.). Nutrient bioavailability: Getting the most out of food: (EUFIC). Retrieved from https://www.eufic.org/en/food-today/article/nutrient-bioavailability-getting-the-most-out-of-food Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. (n.d.). FAO TERM PORTAL. Retrieved from http://www.fao.org/faoterm/en/ Kau AL, Ahern PP, Griffin NW, Goodman AL, Gordon JI. 2011. Human nutrition, the gut microbiome and the immune system. Nature 474: 327–336. DOI: 10.1038/nature10213. |
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