TY - JOUR AU - Herrero, M. AU - Thornton, P.K. AU - Power, B. AU - Bogard, J.R. AU - Remans, R. AU - Fritz, S. AU - Gerber, J.S. AU - Nelson, G. AU - See, L. AU - Waha, K. AU - Watson, R.A. AU - West, P.C. AU - Samberg, L.H. AU - van de Steeg, J. AU - Stephenson, E. AU - van Wijk, M. AU - Havlik, P. PY - 2017// TI - Farming and the geography of nutrient production for human use: a transdisciplinary analysis T2 - Lancet Planet Health JO - The Lancet. Planetary Health SP - e33-e42 VL - 1 IS - 1 AB - BACKGROUND: Information about the global structure of agriculture and nutrient production and its diversity is essential to improve present understanding of national food production patterns, agricultural livelihoods, and food chains, and their linkages to land use and their associated ecosystems services. Here we provide a plausible breakdown of global agricultural and nutrient production by farm size, and also study the associations between farm size, agricultural diversity, and nutrient production. This analysis is crucial to design interventions that might be appropriately targeted to promote healthy diets and ecosystems in the face of population growth, urbanisation, and climate change. METHODS: We used existing spatially-explicit global datasets to estimate the production levels of 41 major crops, seven livestock, and 14 aquaculture and fish products. From overall production estimates, we estimated the production of vitamin A, vitamin B12, folate, iron, zinc, calcium, calories, and protein. We also estimated the relative contribution of farms of different sizes to the production of different agricultural commodities and associated nutrients, as well as how the diversity of food production based on the number of different products grown per geographic pixel and distribution of products within this pixel (Shannon diversity index [H]) changes with different farm sizes. FINDINGS: Globally, small and medium farms (50 ha) dominate production in North America, South America, and Australia and New Zealand. In these regions, large farms contribute between 75% and 100% of all cereal, livestock, and fruit production, and the pattern is similar for other commodity groups. By contrast, small farms (1.5). Similarly, the majority of global micronutrients (53-81%) and protein (57%) are also produced in more diverse agricultural landscapes (H>1.5). By contrast, the majority of sugar (73%) and oil crops (57%) are produced in less diverse ones (H