Global food production is suffering from an increasing number of "food shocks", with most caused by extreme weather and geopolitical crises.
An international study led by researchers from the Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies (IMAS) and the Centre for Marine Socioecology looked at the incidence of land and marine food shocks - sudden losses in food production - between 1961 and 2013.
The research, published in the journal Nature Sustainability, identified 226 food production shocks across 134 nations over the 53-year period, noting an increasing frequency of shocks across all sectors on a global scale.
Lead author Richard Cottrell said extreme weather was a major cause of shocks to crops and livestock, highlighting the vulnerability of food production to climate and weather volatility.
"In recent decades we have become increasingly familiar with images in the media of disasters such as drought and famine around the world," Cottrell said.