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MountainWet: A climate resilience network linking the Peruvian Andes and Indian Himalaya
项目编号67A9AA70-CD70-4527-B9EF-D959CAD0D66C
Chad Staddon
项目主持机构University of the West of England
开始日期2021
结束日期2022-03-31
英文摘要Wetland systems play important roles in supporting socio-ecological systems across a range of scales, but the specific contributions of mountain wetlands are under-researched and underappreciated. This project aims to strengthen the capacities of local mountain communities for climate resilience, through the development of the MountainWet network as a hub to connect different stakeholders involved in the monitoring activities of mountain wetlands. It focuses on case study mountain wetlands located in the Cachi basin in Ayacucho Province (Peru) and upper Ganga basin, Uttarakhand and Himachal Pradesh (India).Peruvian Andean communities are considered particularly vulnerable to climate change due to the acceleration of glacial retreat and increased weather volatility and anthropogenic pressures (Vuille et al., 2008). Similarly, Indian Himalayan communities are under tremendous stress due to a range of anthropogenic drivers including deforestation, urbanisation, industrialisation, overfishing, introduced species, land encroachment, tourism, agricultural intensification and climate change, manifested by the shrinkage in their areal extent, and decline in the hydrological, economic and ecological functions they perform (Xu et al., 2009). Better understanding of their socio-ecological status and functioning may, in the presence of a well-organised network for key stakeholders, create the conditions for better climate resilience. Upscaling this network through the Great Ranges could directly and indirectly improve the water, energy, food and climate nexus systems upon which as many as four billion people depend.The Andes and Himalayan Great Ranges share common yet locally differentiated characteristics and threats. In the future, people in the Andes will likely to experience dry spells and less water (Buytaert et al., 2011), while those in the Himalayas will have to contend with continuing trends of volatile alternation between drought and flood conditions (Gupta and Kulkarni, 2018). By understanding their unique as well as common characteristics, we aim to facilitate knowledge exchange in this project to improve climate resilience from the bottom-up. For example, we aim to support knowledge and practice to regenerate Peru's traditional water management practices, scaling them up into national policy (continuing work begun under a Newton-Paulet-funded project in 2019). These practices include 'water sowing' (locally distributed storage of water) and water harvesting; they increase infiltration of rainwater benefitting productive and domestic uses during the dry seasons. In India, the current rules pertaining to wetlands do not give any importance to the need for involving local communities in their conservation. Since wetlands do not fall under a specific administrative category, they tend to suffer from not a single body taking responsibility for their conservation. However, there are several locally initiated examples of community-led initiatives towards wetland conservation and management, involving local campaigns, public interest litigation and management by local institutions with the support of civil society organisations. Study of these examples will help develop role clarity between different stakeholders including various departments and concerned local communities towards conservation and wise use of wetlands in both the Peruvian and Himalayan contexts.The combined geographical experience and scientific expertise of the participating researchers and institutions allow for truly integrated socio-ecological research, making linkages between natural and human-made elements of the climate resilience impacts of mountain wetlands. The MountainWet Climate Resilience Network will quickly become the nucleus of a broader community of social and natural scientists, practitioners, policymakers and stakeholders.
学科分类15 - 社会科学与人文
资助机构UK-EPSRC
项目经费186385
项目类型Research Grant
国家UK
语种英语
文献类型项目
条目标识符http://gcip.llas.ac.cn/handle/2XKMVOVA/190887
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
Chad Staddon.MountainWet: A climate resilience network linking the Peruvian Andes and Indian Himalaya.2021.
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