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Selenium deficiency risks in sub-Saharan African food systems and their geospatial linkages

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 April 2020

I. S. Ligowe
Affiliation:
Lilongwe University of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Bunda Campus, P.O. Box 219, Lilongwe, Malawi The Department of Agricultural Research Services, P.O. Box 30799, Lilongwe 3, Malawi
F. P. Phiri
Affiliation:
School of Biosciences, University of Nottingham, Bonington Campus, Loughborough, LeicestershireLE12 5RD, UK Department of Nutrition, HIV and AIDS, Ministry of Health, Lilongwe, Malawi
E. L. Ander
Affiliation:
School of Biosciences, University of Nottingham, Bonington Campus, Loughborough, LeicestershireLE12 5RD, UK Inorganic Geochemistry, Centre for Environmental Geochemistry, British Geological Survey, NG12 5GG, UK
E. H. Bailey
Affiliation:
School of Biosciences, University of Nottingham, Bonington Campus, Loughborough, LeicestershireLE12 5RD, UK
A. D. C. Chilimba
Affiliation:
The Department of Agricultural Research Services, P.O. Box 30799, Lilongwe 3, Malawi
D. Gashu
Affiliation:
Center for Food Science and Nutrition, Addis Ababa University, P.O. Box 1176, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
E. J. M. Joy
Affiliation:
Faculty of Epidemiology and Population Health, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, Keppel Street, LondonWC1E 7HT, UK
R. M. Lark
Affiliation:
School of Biosciences, University of Nottingham, Bonington Campus, Loughborough, LeicestershireLE12 5RD, UK
V. Kabambe
Affiliation:
Lilongwe University of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Bunda Campus, P.O. Box 219, Lilongwe, Malawi
A. A. Kalimbira
Affiliation:
Lilongwe University of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Bunda Campus, P.O. Box 219, Lilongwe, Malawi
D. B. Kumssa
Affiliation:
School of Biosciences, University of Nottingham, Bonington Campus, Loughborough, LeicestershireLE12 5RD, UK
P. C. Nalivata
Affiliation:
Lilongwe University of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Bunda Campus, P.O. Box 219, Lilongwe, Malawi
S. D. Young
Affiliation:
School of Biosciences, University of Nottingham, Bonington Campus, Loughborough, LeicestershireLE12 5RD, UK
M. R. Broadley*
Affiliation:
School of Biosciences, University of Nottingham, Bonington Campus, Loughborough, LeicestershireLE12 5RD, UK
*
*Corresponding author: M. R. Broadley, email martin.broadley@nottingham.ac.uk
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Abstract

Selenium (Se) is an essential element for human health. However, our knowledge of the prevalence of Se deficiency is less than for other micronutrients of public health concern such as iodine, iron and zinc, especially in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Studies of food systems in SSA, in particular in Malawi, have revealed that human Se deficiency risks are widespread and influenced strongly by geography. Direct evidence of Se deficiency risks includes nationally representative data of Se concentrations in blood plasma and urine as population biomarkers of Se status. Long-range geospatial variation in Se deficiency risks has been linked to soil characteristics and their effects on the Se concentration of food crops. Selenium deficiency risks are also linked to socio-economic status including access to animal source foods. This review highlights the need for geospatially-resolved data on the movement of Se and other micronutrients in food systems which span agriculture–nutrition–health disciplinary domains (defined as a GeoNutrition approach). Given that similar drivers of deficiency risks for Se, and other micronutrients, are likely to occur in other countries in SSA and elsewhere, micronutrient surveillance programmes should be designed accordingly.

Type
Conference on ‘Malnutrition in an Obese World: European Perspectives’
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Authors 2020

Biological role of selenium

Selenium (Se) is an essential trace element with many roles in human health. An important group of Se-containing compounds which are required for optimal health are the selenoproteins(Reference Fairweather-Tait, Bao and Broadley1). There are twenty-five genes expressing selenoproteins in the human genome, including iodothyronine deiodinases, thioredoxin reductases, glutathione peroxidases and other selenoproteins such as selenoprotein P(Reference Fairweather-Tait, Bao and Broadley1). These selenoproteins play important roles in thyroid function, redox homeostasis and antioxidant defence. Se deficiency has been linked with a range of negative health outcomes including reduced immune responses and lower CD4+ T cell counts, increased disease progression and increased mortality among individuals infected with HIV-1(Reference Fairweather-Tait, Bao and Broadley1Reference Rayman4).

Establishing optimal dietary selenium requirements from biomarkers of selenium status

Establishing optimal dietary Se requirements is challenging; these can vary according to age and physiological status of individuals(Reference Fairweather-Tait, Bao and Broadley1). Furthermore, only small amounts of Se are required at an individual level and the corresponding low concentrations of Se in tissues, used as biomarkers of Se status, are technically challenging to measure accurately. Approximately 50 % of an individual's Se circulates in the blood system and this Se pool is responsive to short-to-medium term Se intake (days-to-weeks). Whole-blood or plasma/serum Se concentration is therefore an informative biomarker of Se status at individual and population levels(Reference Fairweather-Tait, Bao and Broadley1). Plasma Se concentrations of 87 and 65 μg/l are typically used as thresholds for the optimal activities of the selenoproteins glutathione peroxidase 3 and iodothyronine deiodinase, respectively, in adults(Reference Thomson5).

A plasma Se concentration of about 100 μg/l corresponds to a habitual Se intake of about 1 μg/kg body mass/d(Reference Fairweather-Tait, Bao and Broadley1). Notably, the optimal plasma activity of other selenoproteins (e.g. selenoprotein P) occurs at greater plasma Se concentrations (>120 μg/l) than for glutathione peroxidase 3 and iodothyronine deiodinase; however, the significance of this for human health has not yet been established(Reference Hurst, Armah and Dainty6). The tolerable upper limit for Se has been defined for adults and adolescents as 400 μg/capita/d based on potential adverse effects(7).

The use of blood Se concentration as a biomarker of Se status requires invasive sampling; there can be sensitivities regarding the use of blood samples (e.g. for HIV testing) and suspicions about blood sampling originating in cultural beliefs, e.g. vampirism or ‘blood sucking’ and witchcraft in some countries(Reference Phiri, Ander and Lark8). Urine Se concentration is an alternative potential biomarker of Se status(Reference Fairweather-Tait, Bao and Broadley1,Reference Phiri, Ander and Lark8,Reference Hays, Macey and Nong9) . Most excreted Se is in a urinary selenosugar(Reference Combs10); however, the concentration of Se in urine is strongly influenced by intra- and inter-individual variation in hydration and urinary flow rates, amongst many other factors(Reference Combs10). Toenail and hair Se concentrations are other potential biomarkers of Se status, which are potentially less invasive than blood Se concentration, and can indicate longer-term Se status(Reference Fairweather-Tait, Bao and Broadley1,Reference Longnecker, Stram and Taylor11) . However, toenails and hair are prone to contamination from extrinsic sources of Se (e.g. dust, hair cleaning products) as well as having their own potential cultural sensitivities. Thus, whilst measurements of urine, toenail and hair Se concentrations can provide useful information, these are less useful than blood Se concentration for assessing population-level Se status.

Evidence of widespread dietary selenium deficiency risks in Africa

Data on the concentration of Se in blood as reported for populations in African countries were obtained from a literature review. Search terms were individual African country names, together with selenium and plasma or serum or blood (conducted August 2017, Web of Science, Clarivate Analytics). There were fifty-four publications in which the Se concentration of whole-blood (n 4), plasma (n 21) or serum (n 29) was reported (Supplementary Table 1). Whilst plasma Se concentration has been reported to represent 81 % of whole-blood Se concentration and 94 % of serum Se concentration(Reference Combs12), the original data values were used in this summary without adjustments. This search was not considered to be exhaustive, but likely to be representative.

Studies from nineteen countries are represented in this literature summary: Algeria (n 2 studies), Côte d'Ivoire (n 2), Democratic Republic of Congo (n 8), Egypt (n 6), Ethiopia (n 6), Ghana (n 2), Kenya (n 1), Malawi (n 8), Morocco (n 2), Mozambique (n 1), Niger (n 1), Nigeria (n 4), Rwanda (n 1), Senegal (n 1), South Africa (n 3), Sudan (n 3), Tanzania (n 2), Uganda (n 1) and Zambia (n 1). From across these studies, we were able to identify blood Se concentration data for a total of 131 distinct groups of people for which an average (mean and/or median) and a dispersion measure of blood Se concentration was reported. Many of the cited studies presented data for case and control groups, the former comprising individuals presenting clinical symptoms (e.g. tuberculosis, HIV), typically in a hospital setting, the latter being drawn from apparently healthy individuals often living or working in the vicinity of the hospital.

The average blood Se concentration data for these 131 groups, and citation details, are provided in Supplementary Table 1. Among these studies, eighty-four of the 131 groups have average blood Se concentrations below the threshold for optimal glutathione peroxidase 3 activity (87 μg/l); sixty-four groups are also below the threshold for optimal iodothyronine deiodinase activity (65 μg/l). These data indicate that Se deficiency risks are potentially high for groups in many settings in Africa. Strong caveats are needed to avoid these summary data being over-interpreted. These include (1) the small number of studies included, (2) not using analytical quality control as inclusion criteria, (3) biases in the original study designs (i.e. explicit case–control comparisons of people experiencing ill-health with healthy controls).

Evidence of geospatial variation in selenium deficiency risks in sub-Saharan Africa

Geospatial variation in Se status has not been studied widely in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). We identified studies from four countries, in which groups of people were selected according to explicit geospatial criteria: Democratic Republic of Congo(Reference Goyens, Golstein and Nsombola13Reference Bumoko, Sadiki and Rwatambuga20), Ethiopia(Reference Gashu, Stoecker and Adish21Reference Gashu, Marquis and Bougma24), Côte d'Ivoire(Reference Arnaud, Malvy and Richard25,Reference Tiahou, Maire and Dupuy26) and Malawi(Reference van Lettow, Harries and Kumwenda27). In all four countries, there is evidence of geospatial variation in Se status.

In the Democratic Republic of Congo, Ngo et al. compared the Se status of groups of pregnant women (about 20 weeks' gestation, n 505 in total), from seven discrete locations(Reference Ngo, Dikassa and Okitolonda18). Serum Se concentration varied from 40 to 111 μg/l between these groups with evidence of geospatial determinants of Se status. This is one of several studies in the Democratic Republic of Congo to have explored geospatial links between Se and iodine nutrition and potentially associated health disorders(Reference Goyens, Golstein and Nsombola13Reference Bumoko, Sadiki and Rwatambuga20). In Côte d'Ivoire, adult plasma Se concentration was reported to be 3–5-fold greater among adults in Abidjan, than in the mountainous Glanlé Region of west Côte d'Ivoire(Reference Arnaud, Malvy and Richard25,Reference Tiahou, Maire and Dupuy26) .

In Ethiopia, Gashu and coworkers have reported geospatial variation in Se deficiency, based on surveys of the serum Se status of about 600 children aged about 5 years in the Amhara Region(Reference Gashu, Stoecker and Adish21Reference Gashu, Marquis and Bougma24). Serum Se concentration ranged from 11 to 291 μg/l; 49 % were below 70 μg/l. Plasma Se concentration was lower in rural villages in the west of Amhara (West Gojjam, East Gojjam, South Gonder zones) than in the east of Amhara Region (North Wollo, South Wollo and Waghemera zones). Given that the consumption of animal-source foods was limited across the region, Gashu and coworkers hypothesised that Se deficiency risks were likely to be due to soil and/or landscape features influencing the Se concentration of the crop(Reference Gashu, Stoecker and Adish21). Based on dietary assessments, Gashu and coworkers concluded that the grain Se concentration of the two dominant cereal crops, teff and wheat, would likely be the primary drivers of differences in Se status; for example, teff had been eaten by 76 % of children in the 24 h prior to the dietary assessments(Reference Gashu, Stoecker and Adish22).

Evidence of widespread dietary selenium deficiency risks and geospatial linkages in Malawi

The most comprehensive geospatial data on the Se status of a population in SSA are from Malawi. A high prevalence of Se deficiency was predicted in Malawi, based on plasma Se concentration ranges of <54 μg/l among a population of adults (n 779) living in rural areas of Zomba District(Reference van Lettow, Harries and Kumwenda27,Reference van Lettow, West and van der Meer28) . These data were consistent with an earlier report of small dietary Se intakes (15–21 μg/capita/daily) among children living in Zomba(Reference Donovan, Gibson and Ferguson29). Subsequent national-scale estimates of Se intake, based on predicted maize grain Se concentrations arising due to variation in soil properties(Reference Chilimba, Young and Black30), strengthened the case that Se deficiency was likely to be widespread.

In a cross-sectional study, designed explicitly to compare the Se status of women living in two locations with contrasting soil types and maize grain Se concentrations, marked differences in the Se status of blood plasma and casual urine were observed(Reference Hurst, Siyame and Young31). Plasma Se concentration in Zombwe extension planning area (EPA) (median 53⋅7 μg/l, sd 9⋅7, range 32⋅3–78⋅4, n 60) was less than half that seen in Mikalango EPA (median 117 μg/l, sd 22⋅5, range 82⋅6–204, n 60) which had been selected as a site because of the local Vertisol soil types used for local crop production, which had previously been linked with much higher grain Se concentrations(Reference Chilimba, Young and Black30). Casual (spot) urine Se concentration in Zombwe EPA (median 7⋅3 μg/l, sd 2⋅0, range 4⋅1–13⋅3, n 59) was one-third that of Mikalango EPA (median 25⋅3 μg/l, sd 18⋅9, range 12⋅4–106, n 56). These data strengthened the case that Se deficiency was likely to be very widespread in Malawi based upon the relative extent of corresponding soil types in Malawi(Reference Chilimba, Young and Black30,Reference Hurst, Siyame and Young31) . The higher plasma Se concentration of people living in areas where Vertisols are prevalent in Malawi (Chikwawa District, which includes Mikalango EPA) has been shown to be consistent with a high erythrocyte Se concentration(Reference Stefanowicz, Talwar and O'Reilly32). Erythrocyte Se concentration is unlikely to be affected by the systemic inflammatory response, which can cause a decrease in plasma Se concentration that is independent of Se status(Reference Stefanowicz, Talwar and O'Reilly32).

To the authors’ knowledge, Malawi is the only country in Africa to have reported Se status using a nationally representative survey of the population(Reference Phiri, Ander and Bailey33). Blood plasma Se concentration was used as a population-level biomarker, from samples collected during the Malawi Micronutrient Survey and Demographic and Health Survey of 2015–16. The study comprised 2761 people, including preschool children (aged 6–59 months), women of reproductive age (aged 15–49 years), school-aged children (aged 5–14 years) and men (aged 20–54 years). Across all demographic groups, the mean and median plasma Se concentrations were 73⋅2 and 68⋅2 μg/l, respectively (sd 33⋅9 μg/l; range 9⋅9–374 μg/l). Plasma Se concentration increased with age, ranging from a median of 57⋅7 μg/l in preschool children to 78⋅4 and 81⋅9 μg/l in adult women and men, respectively(Reference Phiri, Ander and Bailey33).

As predicted from the earlier, localised studies(Reference van Lettow, Harries and Kumwenda27,Reference van Lettow, West and van der Meer28,Reference Hurst, Siyame and Young31) , widespread Se deficiency risks and geospatial linkages were evident(Reference Phiri, Ander and Bailey33). For example, 62⋅5 and 29⋅6 % of women of reproductive age (n 802) had plasma Se concentrations below the thresholds for the optimal activity of the glutathione peroxidase 3 (87 μg/l) and iodothyronine deiodinase (65 μg/l), respectively (Fig. 1). Geostatistical modelling and prediction showed that Se status of people shows marked spatial variation, with higher blood concentrations in areas where particular soils are commonly found (Vertisols) and near Lake Malawi where more fish is likely to be consumed(Reference Phiri, Ander and Bailey33).

Fig. 1. (a) Enumeration area cluster locations from the nationally representative micronutrient survey of Malawi, (b) predicted plasma selenium (Se) concentration (adapted from Phiri et al.(Reference Phiri, Ander and Bailey33)), and (c) urine Se concentration unadjusted for hydration status. Data are for women of reproductive age (15-49 years). Reproduced with minor changes from Phiri et al.(Reference Phiri, Ander and Lark8); https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envint.2019.105218; Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4⋅0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4⋅0) License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

Phiri et al. reported similar geospatial patterns in urine Se concentration, based on casual (spot) urine samples (n 1406) taken from the same sample of women of reproductive age (n 741) and school-aged children (n 665) during the 2015–16 Malawi Demographic and Health Survey(Reference Phiri, Ander and Lark8). Thus, between-cluster (enumeration area) variation in urine Se concentration corresponded with variation in plasma Se concentration (Fig. 1). There was a stronger geospatial correlation between urine and plasma Se concentrations, at the enumeration area scale, when urine Se concentration data were adjusted for individual hydration status (e.g. using specific gravity) than when uncorrected urine Se concentration data were used. The limitations of urine Se concentration as an individual-level biomarker of Se status were evident in that urine Se concentration was not associated with variation in plasma Se concentration between households within a cluster, nor between individuals within a household. Nevertheless, Phiri et al. concluded that urine Se concentration has potential value as a non-intrusive method for population-level surveillance of Se status, especially if urine samples are already being collected for other purposes, e.g. iodine surveillance(Reference Phiri, Ander and Lark8).

Variation in dietary selenium supply and intake in sub-Saharan Africa

Selenium status correlates strongly with the intake of Se from dietary sources(Reference Fairweather-Tait, Bao and Broadley1). Selenium intakes ranging from 3 to 7000 μg/capita/d have been reported globally due to differing dietary preferences and the levels of plant-available Se in the soil on which crops are grown(Reference Fairweather-Tait, Bao and Broadley1,Reference Fordyce, Selinus, Alloway, Centeno, Finkelman, Fuge, Lindh and Smedley34Reference Johnson, Fordyce and Rayman36) . Intake of Se from water and air is usually insignificant, except where local natural or anthropogenic factors arise(Reference Fordyce, Selinus, Alloway, Centeno, Finkelman, Fuge, Lindh and Smedley34). Assessments of dietary Se intake can therefore be made from the direct compositional analysis of duplicate portions of diets, or by secondary analysis of food composition data multiplied by food consumption/expenditure/supply data which are available from various sources(Reference Joy, Ander and Young37Reference Joy, Kumssa and Broadley39).

Among forty-six countries across all of Africa, Joy et al. reported mean and median national Se supplies of 50 and 55 μg/capita/d, using FAO food supply and regional food composition tables and population-weighted data(Reference Joy, Ander and Young37) (Fig. 2). National Se supply ranged from 23 (Liberia) to 93 μg/capita/d (Burkina Faso). These data represent a single data point for each country with an assumed normal distribution, which was then used to estimate the prevalence of Se deficiency(Reference Joy, Ander and Young37). The estimated risk of Se deficiency was 28 % across Africa. Greater risks of Se deficiency were estimated to occur in Eastern (52 %) and Middle (49 %) regions, followed by Southern (26 %), Northern (12 %) and Western (6 %) regions. The critical importance of secondary data quality, and inferred Se supply data for individual countries, is discussed in Joy et al. For example, such analyses are highly sensitive to food Se concentration data, especially for frequently consumed food items, and such concentration data often do not have supporting information on analytical quality control(Reference Joy, Ander and Young37).

Fig. 2. (a) Dietary selenium supply and (b) deficiency risk for forty-six African countries. Inset: sub-regions of Africa (http://unstats.un.org/unsd/methods/m49/m49regin.htm). Reproduced unchanged from Joy et al.(Reference Joy, Ander and Young37); https://doi.org/10.1111/ppl.12144; Creative Commons Attribution 4⋅0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

In the continental-scale analysis of Joy et al.(Reference Joy, Ander and Young37), dietary Se supply in Malawi was estimated to be 34 μg/capita/d compared to a population-weighted estimated average requirement for Se of 37 μg/capita/d. The estimated average requirement is defined as the quantity of intake that meets the requirements of 50 % of an age- and sex-specific population group. A Se deficiency risk of 64 % was estimated based on the estimated average requirement cut-point method(Reference Carriquiry40). Data from Joy et al.(Reference Joy, Ander and Young37) were consistent with a subsequent secondary data analysis, by Joy et al., in which median dietary Se supply in Malawi was estimated to be 21 μg Se/capita/d (25 μg Se/d per adult male equivalent)(Reference Joy, Kumssa and Broadley39). An estimated 74 % of households had inadequate dietary Se supply to meet the sum of household members' estimated average requirements(Reference Joy, Kumssa and Broadley39). Joy et al. assessed dietary Se supply in Malawi using food composition data, derived from national-scale convenience sampling(Reference Chilimba, Young and Black30,Reference Joy, Broadley and Young38,Reference Joy, Kumssa and Broadley39) , which were combined with household food consumption data (and socio-economic data) from the Third Malawi Integrated Household Survey. The Third Malawi Integrated Household Survey was a nationally-representative sample of >12 000 households interviewed from March 2010 to March 2011. In the Third Malawi Integrated Household Survey food consumption module, participants were asked to recall the types and amounts of food consumed in the household during the past 7 d, from a list of 112 food items, and also whether this was sourced from home production, purchased or gifted(Reference Joy, Kumssa and Broadley39). Data were integrated at an EPA level to provide information for 179 disaggregated spatial units.

In Malawi, >50 % of dietary energy was derived from maize(Reference Joy, Kumssa and Broadley39). Other cereals, including rice, sorghum, pearl millet and finger millet, each contributed <5 % of energy intake, whilst legumes and root and tuber crops such as cassava and sweet potato each contributed about 10 % of national energy supply(Reference Joy, Kumssa and Broadley39). All animal source foods combined, including meat, milk and eggs, represented <10 % of overall energy intake.

At an EPA level, the median Se supply per adult male equivalent ranged from 7 μg/d in Kavukuku in northern Malawi (n 64 households) to 44 μg/d in Nampeya in southern Malawi (n 47 households; Fig. 3). The food groups, fish, cereals and legumes contributed 47, 21 and 13 %, respectively, of national annual dietary Se supply, with all of the other food groups each contributing <9 %. Se supply was positively correlated with household socio-economic status, with the risk of Se deficiency substantially greater in lower-expenditure households(Reference Joy, Kumssa and Broadley39).

Fig. 3. (a) Dietary selenium (Se) supply and (b) deficiency risk by extension planning area for Malawi. Median household Se supply (μg/AME/d; AME = adult male equivalent) and the proportion (%) of households with inadequate dietary Se supply to meet the sum of member estimated average requirements. Reproduced unchanged from Joy et al.(Reference Joy, Kumssa and Broadley39); https://doi.org/10.1186/s40795-015-0036-4; Creative Commons Attribution 4⋅0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

Outside of Malawi, there are few reports of geospatial variation in dietary Se supply or intake within countries in SSA, either from food consumption/composition surveys or from duplicate dietary analyses. In Burundi, using duplicate diet analyses and questionnaires, mean intakes of 17 μg/capita/d were reported among adults living in rural areas, compared to 82 and 38 μg/capita/d among urban middle-class men and mothers, respectively, and 67 and 64 μg/capita/d in hospital and university institutional settings, respectively(Reference Benemariya, Robberecht and Deelstra41). Access to fish, based on increased purchasing power, was associated with increased Se intake in urban settings. These observations are consistent with small Se intakes (15–21 μg/capita/d) reported among children living in Zomba District, in rural southern Malawi(Reference Donovan, Gibson and Ferguson29), as compared to larger intakes (44–46 μg/capita/d) in Mangochi District, adjacent to the southern end of Lake Malawi, where fish consumption was greater(Reference Eick, Maleta and Govasmark42).

Linkages between dietary selenium supply and intake, food crop composition and soil type in Malawi

Geospatially-resolved food composition data from Malawi(Reference Chilimba, Young and Black30,Reference Joy, Broadley and Young38,Reference Joy, Kumssa and Broadley39) provide strong evidence of links between soil type and food crop Se composition, consistent with observations from an earlier analysis of soils and maize grain(Reference Chilimba, Young and Black30). Chilimba et al. sampled seventy-three sites in 2009 and reported a median maize grain Se concentration of 16 μg/kg(Reference Chilimba, Young and Black30). This value was less than reported in earlier food composition data from Malawi(Reference Donovan, Gibson and Ferguson29). However, a single large maize grain Se concentration of 533 μg/kg was noted from a crop growing on a Vertisol soil (pH 7⋅9), in Mikalango EPA, in the south of Malawi(Reference Chilimba, Young and Black30). This observation led to the additional sampling of Vertisol sites in 2010, with large maize grain Se concentrations 173–413 μg/kg reported subsequently at thirteen sites in Mangoti, Dolo and Mikalango EPA, where soil pH values ranged from 7⋅0 to 8⋅0(Reference Chilimba, Young and Black30).

Across the full data set of Chilimba et al., there was a weak positive correlation between grain Se concentration and potentially plant-available soil Se concentration, but no correlation between grain Se concentration and total soil Se concentration(Reference Chilimba, Young and Black30). There was a stronger positive correlation between grain Se concentration and soil pH above pH 6⋅5. Inorganic Se, selenate (Se6+) and selenite (Se4+), is usually categorised into three soil fractions: fixed, adsorbed (phosphate-extractable) and soluble Se. Fixed Se, which is bonded to soil minerals and soil organic matter, is likely to be unavailable for plant uptake. Chilimba et al.(Reference Chilimba, Young and Black30) proposed that the correlation between grain Se concentration and soil pH was linked to decreasing adsorption of inorganic selenate and selenite on iron/manganese oxides at increasing pH. Chilimba et al.(Reference Chilimba, Young and Black30) also noted that the chemical stability of selenate, which is taken up more rapidly than selenite by plants under most soil conditions, is greater in the soil solution at higher soil pH values. Recent studies have similarly shown that fertiliser-applied selenate is more bioavailable in Vertisols than in acidic soils such as Oxisols and Alfisols(Reference Ligowe, Young and Ander43).

Vertisols represent about 0⋅5 % of the total land area of Malawi(Reference Chilimba, Young and Black30,Reference Ligowe, Young and Ander43) although they are agriculturally significant, e.g. they represent about 11 % of the cultivated arable soils of Blantyre agricultural development division, which is one of the eight agricultural development divisions covering Malawi(Reference Chilimba, Syers, de Vries and Nyamudeza44). Vertisols form from Ca- and Mg-rich parent materials, such as limestones and basalts, and in topographic depressions where leached elements collect from higher elevations(Reference Ligowe, Young and Ander43). Vertisols have a predominantly 2:1 clay mineralogy, whereas the acidic Oxisols and moderately acidic Alfisols, which dominate most arable systems in Malawi, are characterised by larger concentrations of hydrous oxides of aluminium, iron and manganese, which can adsorb inorganic Se anions much more strongly than the Vertisols(Reference Ligowe, Young and Ander43). The cycling of Se between organic and inorganic forms is also likely to have a strong influence on crop Se uptake and it is noteworthy that Vertisols have a variable, but generally much larger, soil organic matter content than the Alfisols and Oxisols.

Beyond these studies in Malawi, there are only limited data on linkages between soil type and food crop composition elsewhere in SSA. However, there is circumstantial evidence to support the hypotheses: (1) that many soils in SSA will provide inadequate Se to food crops for optimal human health, especially where access to animal source foods is limited, and (2) that soil factors including pH, organic matter content and soil mineralogy directly influence crop Se concentration.

In South Africa, Courtman et al. reported evidence of longer-range geospatial variation in the Se concentration of maize grain, sampled from maize silos, in the context of poor livestock-feed quality linked to a (widely-recognised) high prevalence of Se deficiency among livestock(Reference Courtman, van Ryssen and Oelofse45). Of the 896 grain samples taken from 231 silos, 46 % had <12 μg/kg, 76 % had <25 μg/kg and 88 % of samples had <40 μg/kg. Courtman et al. discussed these data in the context of previously published maps of total soil Se concentration and soil pH for South Africa; however, they were not able to identify a direct link between soil and grain properties in their study(Reference Courtman, van Ryssen and Oelofse45).

In the central Kenya Highlands, Ngigi et al. reported low Se concentrations in maize grain (range 11–48 μg/kg) and bean (range 18–48 μg/kg) from three sites of moderately acidic soils (pH 5⋅8–6⋅2)(Reference Ngigi, Lachat and Masinde46). These data contrast with larger Se concentrations reported in maize grain (median 182 μg/kg; seventeen sites) and bean (median 150 μg/kg; four sites) from more alkaline soils (median pH 7⋅9) in a separate study in the south of Kenya(Reference Kumssa, Joy and Young47).

In western Kenya and north-eastern Tanzania, maize grain and bean seed Se concentrations were greater in calcareous than non-calcareous soils in both countries(Reference Watts, Middleton and Marriott48). In Kenya, median maize grain Se concentrations were 37 and 27 μg/kg and median bean seed Se concentrations were 63 and 34 μg/kg, in the calcareous (median pH 7⋅1) and non-calcareous (median pH 5⋅3) soils, respectively(Reference Watts, Middleton and Marriott48). In Tanzania, median maize grain Se concentrations were 223 and 159 μg/kg and median bean seed Se concentrations were 256 and 138 μg/kg, in the calcareous (median pH 7⋅0) and non-calcareous (median pH 5⋅8) soils, respectively(Reference Watts, Middleton and Marriott48).

Knowledge gaps in selenium in sub-Saharan African food systems

Evidence of Se or other micronutrient deficiency linkages across the agriculture–nutrition–health domains remains scarce in SSA. Elsewhere, case studies of linkages between soil, crop, livestock and human Se status have been reviewed extensively(Reference Fairweather-Tait, Bao and Broadley1Reference Rayman4,Reference Fordyce, Selinus, Alloway, Centeno, Finkelman, Fuge, Lindh and Smedley34Reference Johnson, Fordyce and Rayman36) . For example, in China, a detailed geochemical analysis of areas with a high incidence of Keshan disease in the late 1990s showed that the incidence was negatively correlated with water-soluble soil Se(Reference Johnson, Fordyce and Rayman36). In New Zealand, increased Se intake and status correlated with the imports of Australian wheat that contained a larger concentration of Se(Reference Thomson5,Reference Watkinson49,Reference Thomson and Robinson50) . In the UK and other countries in northern Europe, decreased Se intake and status is likely to have occurred since the mid-1970s as a consequence of altered trade leading to reductions in the imports of wheat from the USA and Canada(Reference Fairweather-Tait, Bao and Broadley1Reference Rayman4,Reference Fordyce, Selinus, Alloway, Centeno, Finkelman, Fuge, Lindh and Smedley34Reference Johnson, Fordyce and Rayman36) . This is because the grain Se concentration of wheat grown in the USA and Canada is more than ten times greater than that grown in the UK, due to the prevalence of soils containing large concentrations of plant-available Se in North American wheat-growing areas. There is no evidence of soil Se depletion due to more intensive cropping over the past century in the UK(Reference Fan, Zhao and Poulton51). From nationally-aggregated data, polished rice from the USA and India had grain Se concentration >30 times greater than the rice sourced from Egypt(Reference Williams, Lombi and Sun52). In Algeria, wheat grain Se concentration from eight different areas ranged from 21 to 153 μg/kg, and correlated positively with total soil Se concentration(Reference Beladel, Nedjimi and Mansouri53). In Finland, linkages between the supply of Se into the soil via Se-enriched fertilisers, its subsequent uptake into crops, and the Se intake and status among populations are conclusive(Reference Fordyce, Selinus, Alloway, Centeno, Finkelman, Fuge, Lindh and Smedley34,Reference Alfthan, Eurola and Ekholm54) .

In a global-scale modelling study, Jones et al. projected that total soil Se concentration, and thereby crop Se concentration and dietary Se intakes, will likely decrease under moderate climate-change scenarios by the years 2080–2099(Reference Jones, Droz and Greve55). Decreases in total soil Se concentration, driven by complex climate–soil interactions, have been estimated to be especially pronounced in areas currently under agricultural production in southern Africa(Reference Jones, Droz and Greve55). This model was developed from a compilation of fifteen data sets of total soil Se concentration (n 33 241). Soil data for Africa comprised: data from Chilimba et al.(Reference Chilimba, Young and Black30) and Joy et al.(Reference Joy, Broadley and Young38) for Malawi (n 276); data reproduced by Courtman et al.(Reference Courtman, van Ryssen and Oelofse45) for the South Africa maize study described earlier (n 148); and data from Maskall and Thornton(Reference Maskall and Thornton56) from a soil micronutrient survey of Lake Nakuru National Park, Kenya, characterised by a low total soil Se concentration (n 123).

In a global-scale surveillance study, Sillanpää and Jansson reported the Se status of soils and co-located plants in thirty countries, including eight in Africa(Reference Sillanpää and Jansson57). Soil and plant samples were collected during an earlier survey of micronutrients which, unlike Se, are essential for plant growth, such as zinc(Reference Sillanpää58,Reference Sillanpää59) . Topsoil Se concentration was reported using an acid ammonium acetate-EDTA universal extraction(Reference Sippola60). The Se concentration of the leaf tissues of maize and wheat was used as an indicator tissue, rather than edible crop portions. Given that Se is translocated efficiently by plants, leaf Se concentration is expected to be a good proxy for relative grain Se concentration and for other food crops, including roots, tubers, leaves, fruit and therefore dietary Se intake(Reference White61). The data are also expected to be a good proxy for Se concentrations in livestock forages. Across the global dataset (n 3644), a positive correlation between soil pH and plant Se concentration, and a negative correlation between soil organic carbon and plant Se concentration were reported(Reference Sillanpää and Jansson57).

Six countries in SSA had data represented which could be georeferenced digitally, based on original hard copy maps(Reference Sillanpää and Jansson57Reference Sillanpää59). These were Ethiopia (n 126 locations), Malawi (n 100), Nigeria (n 145), Sierra Leone (n 50), Tanzania (n 179) and Zambia (n 46). Data for Ghana were not georeferenced. Egypt (n 200) was represented from North Africa. Summary soil and plant Se concentration data for these countries are illustrated in Figs. 4 and 5. All data, including georeferenced locations, are reproduced in Supplementary Table 2.

Fig. 4. Summary selenium (Se) concentration data from Sillanpää and Jansson(Reference Sillanpää and Jansson57) for (a) maize (white boxes) and wheat (grey boxes) leaves, (b) topsoil using acid ammonium acetate-EDTA universal extraction: Egypt (EGY), Ethiopia (ETH), Ghana (GHA), Malawi (MWI), Nigeria (NGA), Sierra Leone (SLE), Tanzania (TZA), Zambia (ZMB). Boxes represent upper and lower quartiles; whiskers are the 95 %-iles; medians are indicated within the boxes.

Fig. 5. Georeferenced selenium (Se) concentration data from Sillanpää and Jansson(Reference Sillanpää and Jansson57) for leaf maize (blue circles) and wheat (green squares): Egypt (EGY), Ethiopia (ETH), Malawi (MWI), Nigeria (NGA), Sierra Leone (SLE), Tanzania (TZA), Zambia (ZMB).

A GeoNutrition perspective

There is clear scope for increasing the quality of geospatially defined information on the Se status of soil, crop, livestock and human subjects in SSA. Soil maps from the Africa Soil Information Service include continental-scale elemental maps which are based on various data sources including spectral (e.g. X-ray fluorescence, mid infra-red) analysis techniques(Reference Hengl, Heuvelink and Kempen62). Unfortunately, it is not possible to quantify soil/crop Se concentration or human (or livestock) biomarkers of Se status, using spectral methods. Sensitive ‘wet chemistry’ preparation methods and instrumental analysis, e.g. using inductively coupled plasma-MS, together with good quality control procedures, is needed to measure Se accurately and rapidly.

The GeoNutrition project, funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, began in 2018 with the explicit aim of mapping soil–crop–human micronutrient linkages and their uncertainties, including for Se. The primary locations for the project are cropland areas of Malawi and Ethiopia, in which co-located topsoils and mature cereal grains are being sampled and analysed. The project is also testing the effectiveness of increasing the Se concentration of cereal starch using Se fertilisers (agro-fortification)(Reference Chilimba, Young and Black63). The study areas are in Malawi and Ethiopia, respectively, where previous studies have indicated that a high prevalence of Se deficiency is likely.

The protocol for the Addressing Hidden Hunger with Agronomy, Malawi trial (Registered March 2019; ISCRTN85899451) was published recently(Reference Joy, Kalimbira and Gashu64). A double-blind, randomised controlled trial is being conducted in rural villages in Kasungu District, Central Region, Malawi. In this two-arm trial, 180 women (aged 20–45 years) and 180 children (aged 5–10 years) are randomised at the household level so that participants receive maize starch (330 g/capita/d) that is either enriched with Se through agro-fortification, or a control starch not enriched with Se. The primary trial outcome is serum Se concentration. The hypothesis is that the consumption of maize starch agro-fortified with Se will increase serum Se concentration in a Se-deficient population. A subsequent trial in Ethiopia will use a similar design with teff instead of maize(Reference Joy, Kalimbira and Gashu64). The GeoNutrition project is also exploring wider socio-economic and ethical dimensions of agro-fortification and alternative interventions to address micronutrient deficiencies.

Anticipated outcomes of the GeoNutrition project include the stimulation of discussions on how best to use geospatial information to support policies to alleviate Se and other micronutrient deficiencies. Thus, new baseline maps and evidence (and uncertainties therein) will help to integrate evidence across the agriculture–nutrition–health domains to support policy decisions that are cost-effective and most expedient. For example, national micronutrient surveys, which currently focus solely on biomarkers and proxy outcomes of micronutrient status, could be integrated with geospatially-resolved food composition/consumption surveys. Such data could then be viewed in the context of current and future agricultural production and trade which, in turn, will be affected by demographic, socio-economic and environmental change at multiple scales(Reference Nelson, Bogard and Lividini65).

Supplementary material

The supplementary material for this article can be found at https://doi.org/10.1017/S0029665120006904

Acknowledgements

We thank Martti Esala and Riikka Keskinen (Luonnonvarakeskus, LUKE, Finland) and Keith Shepherd (ICRAF, Kenya) for access to data from Sillanpää(Reference Sillanpää58), Sillanpää(Reference Sillanpää59) and Sillanpää and Jansson(Reference Sillanpää and Jansson57). We thank William D. Broadley for support with georeferencing the location maps from Sillanpää(Reference Sillanpää58). EL Ander publishes with the permission of the BGS Director.

Financial Support

Funding for contributions to this study was provided by the Royal Society-UK Department for International Development under project AQ140000, Strengthening African capacity in soil geochemistry for agriculture and health, and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation under project INV-009129 GeoNutrition. The funders were not involved in any aspect of the writing of the paper.

Conflict of Interest

None.

Authorship

The paper was conceived and written by I. S. L., F. P. P. and M. R. B.. D. K. B. georeferenced the primary data from Sillanpää and Jansson(Reference Sillanpää and Jansson57). E. J. M. J. contributed to the literature survey of blood selenium concentration data from continental Africa. E. L. A. contributed to the production of new and revised figures. All authors contributed to the final version of the paper.

Footnotes

Contributed equally.

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Figure 0

Fig. 1. (a) Enumeration area cluster locations from the nationally representative micronutrient survey of Malawi, (b) predicted plasma selenium (Se) concentration (adapted from Phiri et al.(33)), and (c) urine Se concentration unadjusted for hydration status. Data are for women of reproductive age (15-49 years). Reproduced with minor changes from Phiri et al.(8); https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envint.2019.105218; Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4⋅0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4⋅0) License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

Figure 1

Fig. 2. (a) Dietary selenium supply and (b) deficiency risk for forty-six African countries. Inset: sub-regions of Africa (http://unstats.un.org/unsd/methods/m49/m49regin.htm). Reproduced unchanged from Joy et al.(37); https://doi.org/10.1111/ppl.12144; Creative Commons Attribution 4⋅0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

Figure 2

Fig. 3. (a) Dietary selenium (Se) supply and (b) deficiency risk by extension planning area for Malawi. Median household Se supply (μg/AME/d; AME = adult male equivalent) and the proportion (%) of households with inadequate dietary Se supply to meet the sum of member estimated average requirements. Reproduced unchanged from Joy et al.(39); https://doi.org/10.1186/s40795-015-0036-4; Creative Commons Attribution 4⋅0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

Figure 3

Fig. 4. Summary selenium (Se) concentration data from Sillanpää and Jansson(57) for (a) maize (white boxes) and wheat (grey boxes) leaves, (b) topsoil using acid ammonium acetate-EDTA universal extraction: Egypt (EGY), Ethiopia (ETH), Ghana (GHA), Malawi (MWI), Nigeria (NGA), Sierra Leone (SLE), Tanzania (TZA), Zambia (ZMB). Boxes represent upper and lower quartiles; whiskers are the 95 %-iles; medians are indicated within the boxes.

Figure 4

Fig. 5. Georeferenced selenium (Se) concentration data from Sillanpää and Jansson(57) for leaf maize (blue circles) and wheat (green squares): Egypt (EGY), Ethiopia (ETH), Malawi (MWI), Nigeria (NGA), Sierra Leone (SLE), Tanzania (TZA), Zambia (ZMB).

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