People’s Perception of Climate Change Impacts on Subtropical Climatic Region: A Case Study of Upper Indus, Pakistan

IF 3 Q2 METEOROLOGY & ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES Climate Pub Date : 2024-05-16 DOI:10.3390/cli12050073
Bashir Ahmad, Muhammad Umar Nadeem, Saddam Hussain, Abid Hussain, Zeeshan Tahir Virik, Khalid Jamil, N. Raza, Ali Kamran, Salar Saeed Dogar
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Abstract

In developing countries like Pakistan, the preservation of the environment, as well as people’s economies, agriculture, and way of life, are believed to be hampered by climate change. Understanding how people perceive climate change and its signs is essential for creating a variety of adaptation solutions. In this study, we aim to bridge the gap in current research within this area, which predominantly relies on satellite data, by integrating qualitative assessments of people’s perceptions of climate change, thereby providing valuable ground-based observations of climate variability and its impacts on local communities. Field-based data were collected at different altitudes (upstream (US), midstream (MS), and downstream (DS)) of the Upper Indus Basin using both quantitative and qualitative assessments in 2017. The result shows that these altitudes are highly variable in many contexts: socioeconomic indicators of education, agriculture, income, women empowerment, health, access to basic resources, and livelihood diversifications are highly variable in the Indus Basin. The inhabitants of the Indus Basin perceive the climate changing around them and report impacts of this change as increase in overall temperatures (US 96.9%, MS 97%, DS 93.6%) and erratic rainfall patterns (US 44.1%, MS 73.3%, DS 51.0%) resulting in increased water availability for crops (US 38.6%, MS 39.7%, DS 54.8%) but also increasing number of dry days (US 56.7%, MS 85.5%, DS 67.1%). Communities at these altitudes said that agriculture was their primary source of income, making them particularly vulnerable to the effects of climate change and the dangers that go along with it. The insights are useful for determining what information and actions are required to support local climate-related hazard management in subtropical climate regions. Moreover, it is vital to launch a campaign to raise awareness of potential hazards, as well as to provide training and an early warning system.
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人们对气候变化对亚热带气候区影响的认识:巴基斯坦上印度河案例研究
在巴基斯坦这样的发展中国家,人们认为气候变化会妨碍环境保护以及人们的经济、农业和生活方式。了解人们如何看待气候变化及其征兆对于制定各种适应解决方案至关重要。在这项研究中,我们旨在通过整合人们对气候变化看法的定性评估,从而为气候变异及其对当地社区的影响提供宝贵的地面观测数据,从而弥补目前该领域研究主要依赖卫星数据的不足。2017 年,通过定量和定性评估,在上印度河流域的不同高度(上游(US)、中游(MS)和下游(DS))收集了基于实地的数据。结果显示,这些海拔高度在许多情况下都存在很大差异:印度河流域的教育、农业、收入、妇女赋权、健康、基本资源获取和生计多样化等社会经济指标都存在很大差异。印度河流域的居民认为他们周围的气候正在发生变化,并报告说这种变化的影响是总体气温上升(美国 96.9%,密西西比州 97%,达累斯萨拉姆州 93.6%)和降雨模式不稳定(美国 44.1%,密西西比州 73.3%,达累斯萨拉姆州 51.0%),导致作物可用水量增加(美国 38.6%,密西西比州 39.7%,达累斯萨拉姆州 54.8%),但干旱天数也在增加(美国 56.7%,密西西比州 85.5%,达累斯萨拉姆州 67.1%)。这些海拔高度的社区表示,农业是他们的主要收入来源,这使他们特别容易受到气候变化的影响以及随之而来的危险。这些见解有助于确定需要哪些信息和行动来支持亚热带气候地区与气候相关的地方灾害管理。此外,开展宣传活动,提高对潜在危害的认识,以及提供培训和预警系统也至关重要。
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来源期刊
Climate
Climate Earth and Planetary Sciences-Atmospheric Science
CiteScore
5.50
自引率
5.40%
发文量
172
审稿时长
11 weeks
期刊介绍: Climate is an independent, international and multi-disciplinary open access journal focusing on climate processes of the earth, covering all scales and involving modelling and observation methods. The scope of Climate includes: Global climate Regional climate Urban climate Multiscale climate Polar climate Tropical climate Climate downscaling Climate process and sensitivity studies Climate dynamics Climate variability (Interseasonal, interannual to decadal) Feedbacks between local, regional, and global climate change Anthropogenic climate change Climate and monsoon Cloud and precipitation predictions Past, present, and projected climate change Hydroclimate.
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