Dataset: Global market drivers for sustainable cephalopod food systems
Data files
Jan 10, 2023 version files 40.95 KB
Abstract
1. Aquatic food systems are important contributors to global food security to satisfy an intensifying demand for protein-based diets, but global economic growth threatens marine systems. Cephalopod (octopus, squid, cuttlefish) fisheries can contribute to food security; however their sustainable exploitation requires understanding connections between nature’s contributions to people (NCP), food system policies and human wellbeing.
2. Our global literature review methodology examined what is known about cephalopod food systems, value chains and supply chains and associated market drivers. For analysis, we followed the IPBES conceptual framework to build a map of the links between cephalopod market drivers, NCP and good quality of life (GQL). Then we mapped cephalopod food system dynamics onto IPBES (in)direct drivers of change relating to catch, trade and consumption.
3. This research contributes knowledge about key factors relating to cephalopods that can support transitions towards increased food security: the value of new aquatic food species; food safety and authenticity systems; place-based innovations and empowerment of communities; and consumer behaviour, lifestyle and motivations for better health and environmental sustainability along the food value chain. We outline requirements for a sustainable, equitable cephalopod food system policy landscape that values nature’s contributions to people, considers UN Sustainable Development Goals and emphasises the role of seven overlapping IPBES (in)direct drivers of change: Economic, Governance, Sociocultural and Socio-psychological, Technological, Direct Exploitation, Natural Processes and Pollution. We present a novel market-based adaptation of the IPBES conceptual framework – our ‘cephalopod food system framework’, to represent how the cephalopod food system functions and how it can inform processes to improve sustainability and equity of the cephalopod food system.
4. This synthesised knowledge provides the basis for diagnosing opportunities (e.g. high demand for products) and constraints (e.g. lack of data about how supply chain drivers link to cephalopod NCP) to be considered regarding the role of cephalopods in transformations towards a resilient and more diversified seafood production system. This social-ecological systems approach could apply to other wild harvest commodities with implications for diverse marine species and ecosystems and can inform those working to deliver marine and terrestrial food security while preserving biodiversity.
Methods
We conducted a global review of scientific literature published in English relating to cephalopod market drivers. Drivers were explained by indicators that influenced market dynamics in positive, negative, neutral or ambivalent directions with respect to different market actors (e.g. relating to market growth/consumer acceptance for a given species or product). We examined study objectives to identify individual drivers discussed, which were then sorted by theme into ‘cephalopod market drivers’ and analysed qualitatively. Among the 101 studies analysed, we identified 110 individual drivers among study objectives which we grouped by topic into 29 ‘cephalopod market drivers’. The ODS document ‘Dataset-GlobalMarketDriversForSustainableCephalopodFoodSystems’ contains summary data relating to these 29 market drivers to demonstrate how market drivers are associated by topic with key variables.
Usage notes
The dataset is a comma-delimited file, created in Microsoft Excel and converted to an open-source ODS format.