The importance of biodiversity for ensuring sustainable human and environmental health is well recognized(Reference Frison, Cherfas and Hodgkin1–3). The loss of biodiversity could pose a threat to the quality and sustainability of human diets(Reference Heywood, Fanzo, Hunter and Borelli4). The Cross Cutting Initiative on Biodiversity for Food and Nutrition, adopted in 2006 by the Convention on Biological Diversity with the partnership of the FAO and Bioversity International, made a strong statement in this regard: ‘Without urgent action that directly engages the environmental, agricultural, nutrition and health communities, biodiversity and the positive options offered by domesticated and wild biodiversity for addressing food security, nutrition deficiencies and the emerging burden of non-communicable diseases will be lost’(5). In response, the FAO, with the support of experts, developed indicators to document scientific work on biodiversity for nutrition in terms of food composition and food consumption(6, 7). On these occasions, the importance of documenting the consumption of wild and neglected or underutilized foods was emphasized.
At the turn of the century, Grivetti and Ogle(Reference Grivetti and Ogle8) underlined the importance of wild plants for meeting the dietary requirements of populations around the globe because the so-called ‘edible weeds’ are often rich in micronutrients and bioactive substances. The authors noted that the scientific literature produced on wild edible plants in the fields of cultural studies, nutrition and food composition remained scattered and that interdisciplinary approaches were lacking. The value of traditional food systems for health and well-being, of which wild harvested foods are an important component, was emphasized by Kuhnlein(Reference Kuhnlein, Kuhnlein, Erasmus and Spigelski9). The consumption of wild plants is an important feature of traditional Mediterranean diets(Reference Simopoulos10, Reference Batal and Hunter11). Consumption of wild foods can serve ‘as a buffer against hunger’ in difficult times while trading of these foods can complement farmers’ income(Reference Bharucha and Pretty12). Termote et al. (Reference Termote, Raneri and Deptford13) argue that consumption of wild foods can reduce the cost of local diets in Kenya while increasing their nutrient adequacy. Burlingame et al. (Reference Burlingame, Charrondiere and Mouille14) and studies cited by Bioversity International(3) showed that the nutritional value of wild and indigenous foods is often higher than that of their cultivated counterparts, but some authors have expressed concerns regarding the presence of antinutritional or toxic components in wild edible plants(Reference Guil, Rodríguez-García and Torija15).
In their review, Penafiel et al. (Reference Penafiel, Lachat and Espinel16) noted that most research on biodiversity and human nutrition was ‘conducted by botanists and agronomists and received less attention from nutritionist and health scientists’. Many studies reviewed by Powell et al. (Reference Powell, Thilsted and Ickowitz17) reported the contribution of wild foods to dietary diversity, but a more limited number documented their contribution to diets in terms of provision of nutrients. The paucity of studies investigating linkages between wild food biodiversity and nutrition is due to methodological difficulties in measuring the contribution of wild foods to nutrient intakes. The most common difficulty is the taxonomic identification of wild edible plants, which is rarely done during food and nutrition surveys. It requires the competence of a botanist. Other difficulties are due to the shortcomings of standard dietary assessment instruments to capture the intake of foods for which the period of availability is often not precisely known. Studies based on the 24 h recall and weighed or observed records usually employ a short recall/recording period, which leads to missing consumption of wild plants available outside the period of recall; these methods cannot provide a comprehensive assessment of the consumption of wild foods over time. FFQ, because they are retrospective, do not suffer from this limitation, but require prior identification of wild foods for inclusion in questionnaires, otherwise their consumption will be ignored. It is therefore crucial, in preparation for food and nutrition surveys, to gather preliminary information on wild edible plants in order to make methodological choices and develop survey instruments that will ensure an accurate and comprehensive representation of intakes from these foods.
The present study is part of the interdisciplinary MEDINA research programme on ‘Promoting sustainable food systems in the Mediterranean for good nutrition and health’(Reference Verger, Perignon and El Ati18). The Tunisian component of the project seeks to investigate the relationship between women’s nutrition and food consumption patterns, their implication in agriculture and their use of local agrobiodiversity in a rural region of the centre of the country(Reference Gaillard, Martin and Bosc19). Consumption of wild plants has not been documented previously in a quantitative manner in Tunisia. Because it was noted incidentally during a previous survey investigating micronutrient deficiencies that wild plants were consumed by the population(Reference Fares, Chahed and Feki20) (J El Ati, unpublished results), it was hypothesized that they could represent a valuable source of nutrients. It was therefore decided to explore the consumption of wild plants to be able to estimate their importance in women’s diets. The objectives of the present study were: (i) to identify the wild edible plants consumed by the population that have potential to provide essential nutrients; (ii) to determine their habitats, seasonal availability and food uses in order to develop an adapted dietary assessment tool; and (iii) to assess their frequency of consumption by women of childbearing age. Aromatic and medicinal uses of wild plants were not included in the scope of the study because their potential contribution to nutrient intakes was deemed to be low(Reference Joshi21).
Methods
Study area
The studies were carried out in the Sidi Bouzid governorate, situated in central Tunisia. The governorate was the starting point of the so-called Jasmine Revolution of 2011, which led to the establishment of a democratic government. In the 1960s, Sidi Bouzid was an essentially rural area where traditional extensive pastoralism was practised. The development of irrigation by the public sector led to the growth of fruit and vegetable production for export to Tunis, the capital city, and to foreign countries. Since the early 1980s, public investment in irrigation has stalled and private investment in intensive agriculture is being promoted. The region is at a turning point where traditional smallholder agriculture, while still predominant, is gradually being marginalized by the development of large farms practising deep-drilling into aquifers, consequently impairing smaller farms’ access to water resources(22). According to the 2014 census, the governorate has a population 429 912, of which 73 % is rural(23). Agriculture is the major employment sector. The level of employment of women is low (24 %), but almost half is in agriculture(23).
Administratively, the governorate is divided in twelve delegations and 111 districts. The climate is Mediterranean with mild winters and hot and dry summers. Average rainfall is 350 mm/year concentrated during the months of September–May(24).
The Centre-West region of Tunisia where the Sidi Bouzid governorate is located is characterized by a prevalence of overweight and obesity among adult women that is lower than the national average (25 % in the Centre-West v. 37 % at national level among women aged 35–70 years)(Reference Traissac, Pradeilles and El Ati25). However, the prevalence of anaemia among women of childbearing age, mostly due to iron deficiency, is slightly higher than the national average (31 v. 26 % at national level)(26). Other micronutrient deficiencies do not appear to be highly prevalent(Reference Fares, Chahed and Feki20).
Ethical clearance
The project was approved by the Tunisian National Council of Statistics (visa 08/2014). Oral informed consent was obtained from persons interviewed for the ethnobotanical study and written consent was provided by participants in the food consumption survey.
Qualitative ethnobotanical study
Wild plants are defined by the FAO(27) as ‘plants or plant species […] that grow spontaneously in self-maintaining populations in natural or semi-natural ecosystems and can exist independently of direct human action’.
The regional government agricultural development commission (Commissariat régional de développement agricole), the personnel of the female extension services unit (Unité féminine de vulgarisation) and territorial extension services (Cellules territoriales de vulgarisation) provided contacts and support to identify key informants and to organize focus group discussions. The qualitative study was carried out in March and April 2014 and complemented in February 2015. It took place in seven delegations of the governorate comprising 69 % of the population (delegations of Sidi Bouzid Est, Sidi Bouzid Ouest, Jelma, Ouled Haffouz, Souk Jdid, Regueb and Meknassy). For security reasons at the time of the study, delegations of the south-western part of the governorate were not visited.
Key informant interviews
Fourteen interviews were carried out with personnel of the Commissariat régional de développement agricole and the Unité féminine de vulgarisation and with farmers identified by them, and with persons encountered during roadside stops (agricultural labourers and persons collecting wild plants). The informants were ten men and four women with various levels of education (engineers, technicians and persons with no formal education). Key informants were asked to list wild plants that were currently consumed in the Sidi Bouzid governorate and identify them in situ where possible. Samples of wild edible plants were collected during field trips to farms, rangeland and riverbeds.
Wild food collection and identification
One hundred and fourteen samples of wild edible plants were collected. Photographs of the plants were taken in situ and a photographic guide was developed. The samples were put in presses and brought back to the herbarium of the National Agronomy Institute of Tunis, where voucher specimens were deposited in a MEDINA project herbarium. Recommendations by Nesbitt et al. (Reference Nesbitt, McBurney and Broin28) for plant identification and nomenclature were followed. Formal identification by an ethnobotanist was based on the Flore de Tunisie (Reference Cuénod29–Reference Pottier-Alapetite31). The names of plants were updated on the basis of Le Floc’h et al.(Reference Le Floc’h, Boulos and Véla32) and The Plant List website(33).
Focus group discussions
Two questionnaires were developed for focus group discussions: one relevant to ethnobotanical information (names of foods, habitat, calendar of availability, collection and trends in perceived abundance since the 1990s) and the other on food uses (parts of the plants used, mode of consumption and culinary preparations where relevant, home processing, marketing, perceived value and inconveniences).
Seven mixed-gender focus group discussions were organized by the Unité féminine de vulgarisation and Cellules territoriales de vulgarisation personnel. The focus group discussions took place in the office of the Cellules territoriales de vulgarisation or in the countryside (farm, natural reserve) and lasted 2–3 h. Some participants brought samples of wild plants that they commonly consumed.
After the purpose of the study was explained by the research team, participants were asked to list the wild plant species, i.e. folk species, that they use as food (‘free listing’(Reference Cotton34)). Once the list was established, the questionnaires were used to structure the discussions, which were conducted in Arabic and were facilitated by the research team. The number of participants in focus group discussions varied from four to twelve. Among a total of forty-three participants, thirty-three were women. Participants’ ages ranged from 17 to 70 years and their level of education varied from no formal education to university studies.
Market visits
All wild edible plants sold on the weekly and daily markets of Sidi Bouzid and on the weekly market of Souk Jdid were recorded in April 2014 and February 2015.
Quantitative survey to determine frequency of wild plant consumption by women
Women aged 20–49 years were randomly selected from the governorate population through a stratified three-stage sampling procedure: the sample was stratified by delegation; thirty-six districts (clusters) were selected with probability proportional to size. In each cluster, twenty households were chosen randomly, and one woman was selected from each chosen household.
The women were interviewed four times, at 3-month intervals, from November 2014 to October 2015. Data on their sociodemographic characteristics and that of their households were collected, as well as their involvement in agriculture and livestock-rearing and non-monetary access to foods from an extended family orchard or garden or family livestock. An asset-based wealth index was computed by principal components analysis using variables pertaining to housing characteristics and ownership of appliances, as described in Traissac et al. (Reference Traissac, Pradeilles and El Ati25).
FFQ of consumption of wild plants were developed using the structure of the validated national FFQ of Tunisia(Reference El Ati, Le Bihan and Haddad35). For each period, a list of wild edible plants was established on the basis of the ethnobotanical study results, using the list of wild plants described by the focus group participants as commonly consumed and their seasonal availability. The number of wild plants inquired about in the FFQ varied across seasons. For each wild edible plant, different plant parts were included where relevant. Consumption was recorded as dishes or other forms of consumption (e.g. snack, salads). The total number of wild edible plant items was forty, sixty-four, seventy and thirty-nine in the autumn, winter, spring and summer FFQ, respectively. The FFQ asked about consumption retrospectively over the previous 3 months, thus the four rounds of survey covered an entire year of wild plant consumption. Frequency of consumption was assessed based on a set of nine frequency choices for consumption ranging from ‘never’ to ‘every day’. An open question was included at the end of the FFQ for recording the consumption of previously unlisted wild plants. The photographic guide was shown to respondents to ensure correct identification of the foods.
The consistency between the ethnobotanical information and the consumption frequency data was examined in order to ensure a triangulation of the information, in particular regarding the comprehensiveness of the wild plant food lists of the FFQ.
Data analysis
Notes were taken by the research team during focus group meetings. An inductive thematic approach, with literal coding, was used to analyse the data(Reference Fade and Swift36). After each focus group meeting, fact sheets were developed for each wild edible plant using paper copies. Fact sheets from the various focus groups were compiled manually into a summary sheet of concordant information for each wild edible plant. Divergent information or opinions were also recorded with an indication of who expressed them (e.g. gender and age of the persons).
EpiData software version 3.1 was used for data entry of the wild plant frequency of consumption survey (EpiData Association, Odense, Denmark, 2008). Quality checks and double entry were performed. Because consumption frequencies did not follow a normal distribution, non-parametric tests (Wilcoxon signed-rank tests) were used for comparisons. Multinomial logistic regression was used to analyse the associations between individual and household characteristics (independent variables) and tertiles of wild plant consumption frequency over the year (dependent variables). Variables with P values less than 0·20 in the univariate analysis were selected for the multivariate model. Odds ratios were computed. In the final model, a variable was considered significant when the P value was less than 0·05. Analyses were performed using with survey data procedures (surveymeans, surveyfreq and surveylogistic) of the SAS statistical software package (version 9.4).
Results
Ethnobotanical study
All key informants and focus group participants knew and had consumed wild plants. In both the key informant interviews and the focus group discussions the first use of wild plants that was mentioned was medicinal use, which was not investigated in the present study.
Wild edible plants mentioned by key informants
The key informants listed thirty folk species of wild edible plants and one species of wild fungus as being consumed currently in the Sidi Bouzid governorate.
Taxonomic identification of wild plants
Thirty-five wild edible plants were formally identified, one Gymnosperm and thirty-four Angiosperms (thirty-one Dicotyledoneae and three Monocotyledoneae). These species belong to twenty-nine genera grouped in twelve families. The most represented families were Asteraceae and Brassicaceae with thirteen and seven species, respectively. The fungus is a desert truffle, Terfezia boudieri Chatin. The vernacular and scientific names of the wild edible plants and fungus are presented in the online supplementary material.
Focus group discussions
The focus group discussions provided detailed information on twenty folk species of wild plants reported by participants to be commonly consumed as food in the governorate (Table 1). These plants had all been mentioned by the key informants.
* kneff is a vegetarian couscous where the vegetable is mixed with the semolina.
† kesra is a traditional flatbread made with durum wheat.
‡ bsissa is a mixture of cereals (usually ground durum wheat) and legumes with spices (fennel, fenugreek or cumin seeds), used as a beverage (with water or milk, and sugar or honey) or as a paste (with added olive oil).
Ethnobotanical information. Most of the wild edible plants mentioned were vegetables, with two exceptions: the fruit of a shrub, jujube (Ziziphus lotus (L.) Lam.), and the seeds of a tree (Pinus halepensis Mill.).
Vernacular names of wild edible plants. A few wild edible plant species had more than one vernacular name (overdifferentiation) and conversely distinct botanical species were designated under the same vernacular name (underdifferentiation), which explains the discrepancy between the number of folk species and the number of species formally identified (Table 1).
A single vernacular name, harra, is used for three distinct taxa of wall-rocket. These taxa were identified as Diplotaxis muralis subsp. simplex L. and Diplotaxis harra Forssk. (harra with yellow flowers) and Diplotaxis erucoides L. (harra with white flowers). The vernacular name besbes arbi corresponds to two taxa, Anethum graveolens L., i.e. dill, which is sub-spontaneous and cultivated in this area, and Foeniculum vulgare Mill., which is spontaneous. The key informants and focus group participants did not distinguish dill and wild fennel as separate species. They distinguished besbes arbi (‘Arab’ fennel) from besbes souri (‘introduced’ fennel) which is cultivated (Foeniculum vulgare var. azoricum Mill.).
Habitat and calendar of availability. Wild edible plants were described as ubiquitous, found in and around cultivated fields and on uncultivated land, rangelands, roadsides and along riverbeds. Their period of availability depends on the species and the plant parts used (Table 1). Wild plants consumed as young sprouts or leaves are generally available from November to April or until June if rains are abundant. Their period of maximum availability is during February and March. As soon as the plants bloom, leaves become tough and are no longer consumed. The jujube fruit matures during the summer (August and September). Fennel seeds mature in June and Aleppo pine seeds during the winter and early spring.
Wild edible plant collection. Wild edible plants were reported to be gathered by men and women, as well as by adolescents and children, except those that are thorny such as wild cardoon (Cynara cardunculus L.) and cotton and milk thistle (Onopordum arenarium (Desf.) Pomel and Silybum eburneum Coss. & Durieu), which were harvested only by adults. Women were more likely to gather wild edible plants than men.
Trends in perceived abundance. The abundance of most wild edible plants depends on water resources, either from rainfall or irrigation. In comparison with the 1990s, six species were said to be currently less abundant (Table 1). Focus group participants said this was due to the adoption of modern farming practices (mechanized tilling, weeding and use of herbicides). In contrast fennel has become more abundant, due to the development of irrigation and domestication.
Food uses. All focus group participants said wild plants were commonly consumed in the Sidi Bouzid governorate except three young university graduate women who declared consuming them very infrequently. The most frequently consumed wild plants are vegetables, i.e. wild fennel, wall-rocket, wild swiss chard (Beta macrocarpa Guss.), malva (Malva aegyptia L.), cotton and milk thistle, wild cardoon, and two allium species (Allium baeticum Boiss. & Allium roseum L.).
Various plant parts are consumed (Table 1). For example, four different parts of cotton and milk thistle are eaten at different stages of maturity of the plant: the collar, tender stalks and capitulum are eaten as vegetables, while the seeds are used as a spice.
Mode of consumption and culinary preparations. The fresh leaves, capitulum, flowers or roots of some wild vegetables are eaten raw (Table 1). For example, Rumex roseus var. lacirus L. leaves (homidha) and the fleshy root of Scorzonera undulata subsp. undulata Vahl (guiz) are often eaten at the site of collection, directly off the plant as a snack. Wall-rocket (harra) is used raw in salads.
The majority of wild plants, however, are eaten cooked as part of main meal dishes, such as couscous, vegetable stews, rice dishes and thick soups. Wild plants are used in couscous in the same way as cultivated vegetables (carrots, courgettes, pumpkin, cabbage, onion, potatoes, etc): vegetables and meat are cooked separately from the semolina and are served on top of it. In contrast, kneff is a vegetarian couscous dish where the wild plant is the main vegetable and is mixed with the semolina. Fennel leaves are often used for the preparation of kneff. Thick pasta-based soups include wild swiss chard. Wild leek (Allium baeticum Boiss.) leaves and bulb are incorporated in the traditional flatbread, kesra. Fennel and cotton and milk thistle seeds are used as spices in a traditional cereal and legume preparation, bsissa, which is made into a beverage or a paste, also containing olive oil, sugar and other optional ingredients. Aleppo pine seeds (zgougou) are used to prepare a dessert (assida) eaten during the celebration of the birth of the Prophet (Mawlid).
Home processing. Wild vegetables are seldom processed for preservation, except wall-rocket which is dried or sometimes frozen. Seeds are dried and stored. The jujube fruit is eaten fresh or dried. Dried jujube has been used in times of food insecurity in the past: in the 1940s, as a replacement or complement to barley flour in bsissa.
Marketing. Focus group participants declared that four wild edible plants are sold in markets: wild fennel, wild swiss chard, wall-rocket and onionweed (Asphodelus tenuifolius Cav.). Wild fennel and wild swiss chard were said to be affordable. During visits to the Sidi Bouzid weekly market, the research team observed the presence of some wild edible plants that focus group participants said were not sold on markets, i.e. wild cardoon, malva and wild leek.
Perceived values of wild edible plants. Wild edible plants are mostly valued for their taste. Fennel, besbes arbi, and wall-rocket, harra, were the preferred wild plants according to focus group participants. Besbes arbi, which has become very popular, was described as more flavourful than besbes souri. When they grow near or in irrigated plots wild edible plants were said to be less tasty. They were considered as healthy, containing vitamins and being ‘good for cholesterol’. Cooking with wild plants is considered as part of the local food tradition. None of the wild edible plants were described as foods consumed only by the poor.
Inconveniences. The major inconvenience mentioned by focus group participants was the short duration of the season of availability of wild leafy vegetables. Some wild edible plants are difficult to harvest and clean because they are thorny (wild cardoon, cotton and milk thistle).
Women’s frequency of consumption of wild plants
Respondent characteristics
Among the 720 women initially included in the sample, ninety-five were lost to follow-up and forty-one had missing information for some of the variables. After exclusion for missing information, 584 women with complete information were available for analysis (response rate of 81 %).
Mean age of the women was 35·3 (se 0·4) years. Most of the women were married (76·9 %) and had children (mean parity of 2·7 (se 0·1)). Only 13·7 % had received secondary or university-level education and 35·2 % reported having a professional occupation. More than half of the women declared being involved in agricultural activities or livestock-rearing (63·0 %). A majority of women had non-monetary access to foods from an extended family orchard (86·0 %), a vegetable garden (52·1 %) or from family livestock (71·4 %).
Consumption of wild plants
Almost all women (98·3 %) reported consuming at least one wild plant over the year (Table 2). Consumption of twenty-four folk species of wild plants and one fungus was recorded. Since the wild fungus was considered by the women as a plant, it is included in the frequency of consumption results (Table 2). The median frequency of consumption of folk species was 2·27 d/month. Over the year, the median diversity of folk species consumed by women was 4 (range 0–17).
P25–P75, first and third quartile of consumption frequency per month.
* Median frequency (number of days) of consumption per month.
Fennel, besbes arbi, was the most often consumed plant: 78·2 % had eaten it with a median frequency of consumption of 0·98 d/month. Women mostly consumed the leaves and very seldom the seeds of fennel. The second most often consumed wild plant was wall-rocket, harra: 67·2 % had eaten it with a median frequency of consumption of 0·81 d/month. Aleppo pine seeds and wild swiss chard were consumed by more than 40 % of women. Five other folk species of wild plants were consumed by a range of 10–30 % of women, while sixteen were consumed by less than 10 %. Four wild edible plants and one fungus that had been listed by key informants but not described as commonly consumed by focus groups were eaten by a small percentage of women (Table 2).
Frequency of consumption of wild plants was highest in winter, followed by autumn, spring and summer (Table 3). Consumption of fennel was observed during all seasons compared with wall-rocket, which was mostly eaten during the winter and spring. Aleppo pine seeds were consumed during the winter and jujube in autumn.
P25–P75, first and third quartile of consumption frequency per month.
a,b,c,d Median values within a row with unlike superscript letters were significantly different as tested with Wilcoxon signed-rank tests (P < 0·05).
* Median frequency (number of days) of consumption per month and median diversity of consumption of folk species (number of different species) per season.
Women used a variety of recipes for the two most frequently consumed wild plants, fennel and wall-rocket. Ninety-two per cent of those who ate fennel prepared it as kneff. They also used fennel in rice dishes (16 % of consumers), in couscous (10 %) or with innards (4 %). In contrast, they used wall-rocket mainly in couscous (77 % of consumers), and less often as kneff (33 %), in stews (14 %) and seldom ate it raw as a salad (4 %). Aleppo pine seeds were almost exclusively consumed as assida for the celebration of the Mawlid.
Sociodemographic characteristics associated with wild plant consumption
Results of the multinomial logistic regression analysis are presented in Table 4. Several variables were associated with a higher frequency of consumption of wild plants: women’s age between 30 and 38 years and having non-monetary access to products from a family vegetable garden were associated with the middle and upper tertiles of frequency of consumption. Urban residence, belonging to the wealthier households and having access to products of the family livestock were associated with the upper tertile of frequency of consumption. The women’s level of education, professional occupation and involvement in agricultural or livestock-rearing activities were not significantly related to the frequency of consumption of wild plants.
Ref, referent category.
* Variables with P value less than 0·20 were selected for the multivariate analysis (shown in bold font).
† OR with P value less than 0·05 were considered significant (shown in bold font).
‡ The referent category is the lower tertile of frequency of consumption of wild plants over the year.
Discussion
Ethnobotanical study
Conducting an ethnobotanical study is a necessary preliminary phase for the study of the contribution of wild foods to diets. Our study followed the methodological steps described in the Guidelines on Assessing Biodiverse Foods in Dietary Intake Surveys (37) for documenting local foods with the purpose of adapting a dietary assessment instrument to capture the contribution of food biodiversity to nutrition. In our study, key informants and in situcollection identified thirty folk species of wild edible plants corresponding to thirty-five taxa, while focus group participants described twenty folk species (twenty-five taxa) as being commonly consumed. Most of these plants were leafy vegetables.
In the ethnobotanical literature, we found only one study of consumption of wild vegetables in Tunisia(Reference Ben Ismail38), conducted in three governorates (Kairouan, Siliana and Le Kef) which are more northern than Sidi Bouzid: Ben Ismail reported the consumption of twenty-five wild vegetables, eight of which were mentioned in our study under the same vernacular and scientific names and three taxa belonging to the same genera but different species. The most popular wild edible plant in our study, fennel, was not reported in that study(Reference Ben Ismail38). The botanical literature of Tunisia reported more taxa used as food: Le Floc’h(Reference Le Floc’h39) inventoried sixty-six wild taxa used as food in southern Tunisia. He mentions species that were also inventoried by Cuenod(Reference Cuénod29) and Potier-Alapetite(Reference Pottier-Alapetite30, Reference Pottier-Alapetite31) as being present in the flora of Sidi Bouzid but were not reported in our study. It is possible that some wild edible plants are no longer found or consumed in the Sidi Bouzid governorate.
Several species of wild edible plants reported in our study by focus group participants were consumed in other circum-Mediterranean countries (Albania, Cyprus, Egypt, Greece, Italy, Lebanon, Morocco and Spain): Foeniculum vulgare Mill., Cynara cardunculus L., Allium baeticum Boiss., Beta macrocarpa Guss., Sonchus oleraceus L., Scolymus hispanicus Desf., and different species belonging to the same genera of Malva, Diplotaxis, Rumex and Ziziphus (Reference Batal and Hunter11, Reference Pieroni, Nebel and Santoro40–Reference Rigat, Gras and D’Ambrosio45). Wild fennel, Foeniculum vulgare Mill., one of the preferred wild edible plants in our study, was recorded in all of these countries except Albania. While a large number of wild edible plants were described in these countries, researchers noted that knowledge of these foods was declining and as most of their key informants were elderly, they predicted that traditional knowledge on wild edible plant gathering and use would not be passed on to younger generations(Reference Pieroni, Nebel and Santoro40, Reference Hadjichambis, Paraskeva-Hadjichambi and Della43). In effect, among the focus group participants of our study, we noted that young educated women expressed limited interest in consumption of wild plants.
The cited circum-Mediterranean studies reported a large variety of culinary preparations of wild plants but some similarities across countries, for instance the preference for consuming cooked wild plants(Reference Pieroni, Nebel and Santoro40). In Morocco, wild plants were used in couscous(Reference Powell, Ouarghidi and Johns44). Some of the recipes reported in our study were also noted by Ben Ismail(Reference Ben Ismail38), for example couscous, soups and rice dishes. In Tunisia, these recipes can be prepared with cultivated or wild vegetables. The recipes using cultivated vegetables are included in the Tunisian national FFQ(Reference El Ati, Le Bihan and Haddad35). In contrast, kneff prepared with wild vegetables seems to be a recipe specific to Sidi Bouzid.
While in several studies respondents considered wild vegetables as foods consumed in situations of food insecurity(Reference Powell, Ouarghidi and Johns44, Reference Boedecker, Termote and Assogbadjo46) or as famine foods(Reference Teklehaymanot and Giday47), we noted only positive perceptions of wild edible plants – they were described as tasty and healthy – apart from the difficulty in harvesting thorny wild plants and the short duration of the season. In Sidi Bouzid wild edible plants are not culturally devalued and are not regarded as food for the poor.
A limitation of the study was the definition we used for wild edible plants which appeared to be problematic in some cases: certain wild plants are both spontaneous and cultivated. Powell et al. (Reference Powell, Thilsted and Ickowitz17) caution against dichotomization of wild v. cultivated plants. For example, the vernacular name besbes arbi, or Arab fennel, designates two species: Anethum graveolens L., which can be cultivated, and Foeniculum vulgare Mill., which is spontaneous. The focus group participants did not distinguish these two species when they were sold on the Sidi Bouzid market.
Women’s frequency of consumption of wild plants
To our knowledge, ours is the first published survey of the consumption of wild plants covering an entire year. Results of the survey were consistent with some but not all of the qualitative ethnobotanical information collected.
The comprehensiveness of the list of wild edible plants included in the FFQ is corroborated by the qualitative study results: the women mentioned having consumed only four foods that were not listed in the FFQ and consumption frequencies of these foods were low. These foods had been mentioned and identified by the key informants but were regarded as not commonly consumed by the focus group participants.
The survey confirmed that consumption of wild plants is common in the Sidi Bouzid governorate, as almost all women reported consuming a wild plant at least once during the year, but consumption frequency was low, with a median occurrence of 2 d/month. Only four wild plant foods were consumed by more than 40 % of women, which were three leafy vegetables and seeds of a tree. Moreover, the women consumed a limited diversity of folk species (median of four different species over the year).
A gap between knowledge of wild foods and actual consumption, observed in our study, was noted by several authors in sub-Saharan African countries(Reference Boedecker, Termote and Assogbadjo46, Reference Termote, Bwama Meyi and Dhed’a Djailo48, Reference Fungo, Muyonga and Kabahenda49). In some studies, the observed discrepancy between knowledge and consumption could be due, in part, to a short recall period, but this is not the case in our study. Diminishing availability of wild edible plants, described by focus groups for some plants as a consequence of the development of intensive agriculture in Sidi Bouzid, is observed in many different contexts(Reference Bharucha and Pretty12). Urbanization and integration in market economies are also often cited as factors that accelerate the decline in use of wild edible plants because acquisition of vegetables from markets has replaced gathering in the wild(Reference Bharucha and Pretty12, Reference Hadjichambis, Paraskeva-Hadjichambi and Della43). That could be the case in Sidi Bouzid, where cultivated vegetables have become widely available in local markets.
The case of fennel, however, shows that local marketing can also be an opportunity for maintaining the use of wild edible plants. In Sidi Bouzid, fennel, the most frequently consumed wild plant, is both a wild and semi-domesticated plant. Women were able to access it in several ways: gathering it themselves, obtaining it from family networks who gathered it or acquiring it from local markets, which explains why both urban and rural women consumed it.
Conclusion
Our research, combining a qualitative study and a population-based survey, was a first attempt to assess the importance of wild edible plants in the diets of women of the Sidi Bouzid governorate of Tunisia. Further research is underway for investigating the nutrient composition of these foods and of dishes that comprise them, and to assess their contribution to nutrient intakes.
In the context of the nutrition transition that is affecting the population of Tunisia, the consumption of wild plants, predominantly leafy vegetables, could play a significant role in mitigating the obesity epidemic and could contribute to providing healthy diets to the population. The favourable perception of wild edible plants observed in the context of this research offers an opportunity for promoting their consumption. Because the agricultural system of the governorate is changing rapidly, with the development of large high-input farms producing for export that will decrease the availability of wild edible plants, research on their nutrition contribution should be a priority and policy makers should be alerted to the potential importance of preserving and promoting this food resource.
Acknowledgements
Acknowledgements: The authors gratefully acknowledge the help and participation of Abdel Kader Hajlaoui (Chief plant production, Commissariat régional de développement agricole); Meriem Hamdouni (Coordinator), Meriem Mejdi, Nsiri Roukaya and Najet Afi (Unité féminine de vulgarisation); Ali Khlifi, Monji Barhoumi, Hsan Hamdi and Lazhar Saidi (Chiefs of Cellules territoriales de vulgarisation of Regueb, Jelma, Ouled Haffouz and Meknassy delegations); Nizar Kadri (Agricultural engineer, Regueb); Abdel Mlak Nsiri (Principal technician, Sidi Bouzid Ouest); Charlotte Morgant (Master student); and of key informants and focus group participants in the qualitative study. The authors thank the women who participated in the survey, and Nesrine Mhamdi and Lucien Djivoh for their contribution to the data analysis. Financial support: The study was funded by Bioversity International under the Research Programme on Agriculture for Nutrition and Health of the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR) and by Agence Nationale de la Recherche (France) under grant ANR-12-TMED-0004-01. The funders had no role in the design, analysis or writing of this article. Conflict of interest: None. Authorship: All authors contributed to the design of the study. M.C.D., Z.G., F.K. and O.K. conducted the fieldwork. O.K. and Z.G. identified the plants and developed the herbarium. M.C.D., F.K., E.O.V. and A.B. performed the data analysis. M.C.D., E.O.V., Z.G., O.K. and F.K. wrote the paper. E.O.V., J.E.A., G.K. and C.T. reviewed the draft and provided comments. All authors approved the final draft. Ethics of human subject participation: This study was conducted according to the guidelines laid down in the Declaration of Helsinki and all procedures involving human subjects were approved by the Tunisian National Council of Statistics (visa 08/2014). Oral informed consent was obtained from persons interviewed for the ethnobotanical study and written consent was obtained from participants in the food consumption survey.
Supplementary material
To view supplementary material for this article, please visit https://doi.org/10.1017/S1368980019003409
Appendix
MEDINA Study Group members
Marie Josèphe Amiot (Chair, INRA, France); Nawel Achir (CIRAD, France); Leila Alouane (INNTA, Tunisia); Jalila El Ati (INNTA, Tunisia); Sihem Bellagha (INAT, Tunisia); Pierre Marie Bosc (CIRAD, France); Mélanie Broin (Agropolis, France); Nicole Darmon (INRA, France); Claudie Dhuique-Meyer (CIRAD, France); Marie Claude Dop (IRD, France); Sophie Drogué (INRA, France); Sandrine Dury (CIRAD, France); Ahmed Ferchoui (INRA, France); Cédric Gaillard (CIRAD, France); Zeineb Ghrabi (INAT, Tunisia); Florence Jacquet (INRA, France); Yves Kameli (IRD, France); Olfa Karous (INAT, Tunisia); Fayçal Kefi (CIHEAM, France/Italy); Emmanuelle Kesse-Guyot (INRA, France); Faten Khamassi (INAT, Tunisia); Denis Lairon (INSERM, France); Yves Martin-Prevel (IRD, France); Caroline Méjean (INRA, France); Claire Mouquet-Rivier (IRD, France); Sondos Njoumi (INAT, Tunisia); Martine Padilla (CIHEAM, France); Marlène Perignon (INRA, France); Carole Sinfort (SupAgro, France); Pierre Traissac (IRD, France); Eric O Verger (IRD, France).