Improving food security and safety through use of edible by-products from wild game

Date Issued
2013-10Date Online
2013-01Language
enType
Journal ArticleReview status
Peer ReviewISI journal
Accessibility
Limited AccessMetadata
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McCrindle, C.M.E., Siegmund-Schultze, M., Heeb, A.W., Zárate, A.V. and Ramrajh, S. 2013. Improving food security and safety through use of edible by-products from wild game. Environment, Development and Sustainability 15(5): 1245-1257.
Permanent link to cite or share this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10568/33687
Abstract/Description
Game harvesting in South Africa generally leaves behind edible by-products, which could be a low-cost source of protein for poor people in rural areas. Seven professional and nine recreational hunters were interviewed, a game harvest and trophy hunt attended and literature reviewed, in order to describe the food value chain for game and ways in which edible by-products could be legally channelled into the human food chain, rather than being left in the field for scavengers. Practices of informal vendors (n = 51) were assessed using structured interviews, observation and microbiological analysis. In an experiment, inspected game by-products (shinbones from impala and springbok) were provided to eight informal traders for cooking at an informal market and microbiological analysis was done before and after preparation. The results showed that providing edible by-products to poor consumers appears to be culturally acceptable, affordable, accessible and safe. A crossover from formal to informal marketing is recommended as it would enhance traceability and safety of the product and minimise the risk of poaching. It is suggested that methods should be developed which make the distribution of edible by-products to vulnerable rural communities feasible.
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AGROVOC Keywords
Subjects
VALUE CHAINS; FOOD SAFETY; FOOD SECURITY;Countries
South AfricaCollections
- CRP A4NH outputs [1502]
- ILRI articles in journals [6643]
- Safe food, fair food [292]
