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Journal ArticleDOI

Animal Foods in Traditional Australian Aboriginal Diets: Polyunsaturated and Low in Fat

TLDR
The results of these analyses suggest that even when the traditional Aboriginal diet contained a high proportion of animal foods it would have been low in fat with a highportion of PUFA and thereby could have protected Aborigines against cardiovascular diseases and related conditions through a combination of factors: low energy density, low saturated fat and relatively high PUFA content.
Abstract
Australian Aborigines develop high frequencies of diabetes and cardiovascular diseases when they make the transition to an urban lifestyle. The composition of the traditional diet, particularly its lipid components, is a most important aspect of the hunter-gatherer lifestyle that would bear on the risk of these diseases. We have examined the fat content and fatty acid composition of a variety of animal foods eaten traditionally by Aborigines from different regions of Australia. The muscle samples of the wild animals from all over Australia were uniformly low in fat (less than 2.6% wet weight) with a high proportion of polyunsaturated fatty acids (greater than or equal to 20% PUFA). Liver samples had a higher range of fat content (5-10% wet weight) but were also rich in PUFA (33-42%). Depot fat samples varied widely in their PUFA content (5-40%). In terms of their PUFA composition the foods tended to fall into three groups: (i) those rich in both n-3 and n-6 PUFA, which included land-based, coastal and freshwater animals; (ii) those rich in n-3 PUFA, i.e., marine species; (iii) those rich in n-6 PUFA, mainly land-based species. The results of these analyses suggest that even when the traditional Aboriginal diet contained a high proportion of animal foods it would have been low in fat with a high proportion of PUFA and thereby could have protected Aborigines against cardiovascular diseases and related conditions through a combination of factors: low energy density, low saturated fat and relatively high PUFA content.

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Edible insects: future prospects for food and feed security

TL;DR: In this article, a wide range of scientific research on the contribution that insects make to ecosystems, diets, food security and livelihoods in both developed and developing countries is presented, with a focus on the role of insects in agriculture.

Australian Dietary Guidelines

Curriculum K
TL;DR: These classroom activities, based on the Australian Guide to Healthy Eating, help explore the outcomes and subject matter in the PDHPE K-6 syllabus.
Journal ArticleDOI

The nutritional value of edible insects

TL;DR: This paper provides an overview of the nutritional aspects of insect consumption (entomophagy) among indigenous populations with special emphasis on the role of food insects as a source of animal protein.

ORIGINAL COMMUNICATION The paradoxical nature of hunter-gatherer diets: meat-based, yet non-atherogenic

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyzed the 13 known quantitative dietary studies of hunter-gathers and demonstrated that animal food actually provided the dominant energy source, while gathered plant foods comprised the remainder (35%).
Journal ArticleDOI

Paleolithic nutrition revisited: a twelve-year retrospective on its nature and implications.

TL;DR: Paleolithic nutrition revisited: A twelve-year retrospective on its nature and implications and its implications for modern nutrition is reviewed.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Marked Improvement in Carbohydrate and Lipid Metabolism in Diabetic Australian Aborigines After Temporary Reversion to Traditional Lifestyle

Kerin O'Dea
- 01 Jun 1984 - 
TL;DR: The major metabolic abnormalities of type II diabetes were either greatly improved or completely normalized in this group of Aborigines by relatively short reversal of the urbanization process.
Journal ArticleDOI

FATTY-ACID RATIOS IN FREE-LIVING AND DOMESTIC ANIMALS: Possible Implications for Atheroma

TL;DR: The question arises as to whether the total domestic development of water-rich vegetation is nutritionally detrimental and that a resultant low balance of polyunsaturated to saturated and monounsaturated fatty acids may be related to arterial disease.
Journal ArticleDOI

The analysis of polyunsaturated fatty acids in meat by capillary gas-liquid chromatography

TL;DR: In this paper, the results indicate that significant reductions in total fat intake and increases in the proportion of polyunsaturated fat in the diet could be achieved without necessarily requiring a diet low in meat.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ecology of Root Use by the Aborigines of Southern Australia

TL;DR: A healthy diet requires a proportion of vegetable food, to provide carbohydrate, fibre and vitamins, and even in seasons when animal protein was abundant, vegetable food seems to have been eaten as an accompaniment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Elevated levels of arachidonic acid in fish from northern Australian coastal waters.

TL;DR: The present data and figures from the literature indicate that the marine food chain in the southern hemisphere contains significant quantities of ω6 fatty acids.
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