Location: Food Systems Research Unit
2024 Annual Report
Objectives
Objective 1. Develop the intellectual framework for an integrated program that addresses how animal food systems can provide nutritious and culturally appropriate foods that may be used to create healthy diets and reduce the risk of chronic disease while maximizing economic return to producers. The program will emphasize human nutrition/health, animal agricultural production, and value-added processing within the context of economic, environmental, and social sustainability. [NP 107: C1 PS1a, C2 PS2b, C3 PS3b]
Objective 2. Ensure integration of research with project “Increasing Small-Farm Viability, Sustainable Production and Human Nutrition in Plant-Based Food Systems of the New England States” in a manner that allows connectivity between all components as well as overall analysis, assessment, integration and modelling of all data. [NP 107: C1 PS1a, C2 PS2b, C3 PS3b]
Objective 3. Develop appropriate linkages and cooperation within and between the USDA-ARS and the University of Vermont, for the purpose of forming an integrated Food Systems program. These include integrated data systems, analytical capabilities, and the capacity to conduct human clinical trials. [NP 107: C1 PS1a, C2 PS2b, C3 PS3b]
Approach
Food systems are interconnected sets of elements that work together to produce, process, distribute, store, sell, and prepare food. They include the upstream activities that support production, such as the creation of farm inputs. They also include downstream activities, such as human nutrition, consumer choice and the disposal or recycling of food waste. This project addresses the ecological sustainability and economic vitality of animal systems in the New England region with the goal of enhancing both public health and sustainable farming practices. To this end, this project will determine how the environmental and economic outcomes of animal systems can be improved while simultaneously enhancing the quality of human diets and improving health outcomes. Research activities will focus on a range of scales, from individuals, such as farmers and consumers, to geographic regions, such as watersheds and foodsheds. In addition, the project will explore how systems change over time. Three overarching questions will guide the Unit’s research on animal systems. First, how can animal systems leverage opportunities for ecological synergies, such as relying on perennial forages or food byproducts, while maintaining or improving economic viability? Second, how can inclusion of animal products in diets encourage consumption of foods lacking in the U.S. diet, such as whole grains, complete protein sources, fruits, and vegetables? And third, how can plant based farming systems interact with animal-production based systems, to improve sustainability and reduce environmental impacts? Research scientists on this project will utilize systems thinking and participatory approaches, like group model building. In addition, the Unit will develop a state-of-the-art facility for computational modeling and data visualization with the ability to link to other data sources and computing resources.
To create effective collaborations with the University of Vermont and stakeholder partners, the Research Unit will identify on-going efforts to understand and improve the ecological, economic, and social sustainability of New England food systems. This process will help ARS staff to design strategic research that answers key questions or integrates data in new ways that lead to transformative improvements in U.S. Food Systems.
Progress Report
This project was established as the location’s first scientist, the Research Leader, was coming on-board. During this project, the location began hiring the scientific, technical, and administrative personnel necessary to pursue the objectives. Two scientists (the Research Leader and a Research Social Scientist), a social science technician, an Administrative Officer, and a Finance and Budget Technician were brought on-board, and recruitments were launched for a Research Animal Scientist, a Research Microbiologist, and a Research Nutritionist / Research Biologist. In addition, ARS collaborated with the University of Vermont to create office, meeting room, and laboratory facilities for the Food Systems Research Unit (FSRU). An existing building, the Hills Agricultural Science Building, was renovated for this purpose, supported in part through a lease and a cooperative agreement between ARS and the university. Renovations started in 2022, completed in 2023, and FSRU personnel moved into the building in September 2023. With regard to research, the Research Leader worked with the University of Vermont (UVM) to develop the location’s first Non-Assistance Cooperative Agreement (NACA) with UVM. The NACA supports research in measuring environmental, economic, production, health, and social sustainability in Northeastern food systems; a stakeholder engagement process to identify emerging strategies to enhance sustainability of the region’s food systems; development of human capacity to study food systems through support of faculty, postdocs, and students; and enhancement of the physical resources to study several key areas in food systems including soil health, nutritional analysis of food, and sustainability impacts of cooking nutritious food. Additional collaborative research was developed through a second NACA with the University of Vermont to study the nutritional quality of rural food purchasing patterns and a NACA with Cornell University to study supply chains for regional production of grass-finished beef. ARS scientists developed the location’s first project plan this fiscal year as part of the National Program 107 project planning cycle for 2023-2027. This plan passed OSQR review, and a new project was initiated to pursue research under the approved plan.
Accomplishments