适应气候变化的农业实践:来自印度土著社区的学习经验

Amitava Aich, D. Dey, Arindam Roy
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引用次数: 2

摘要

气候变化对农业生产方式的影响给热带和亚热带地区数十亿人口未来的粮食安全打上了问号。最近推出的气候智慧型农业(CSA)技术鼓励可持续农业实践,在多个层面提高适应能力和抵御冲击的能力。然而,针对不同的农业生产格局,制定一个适应气候变化的农业实践的单一框架是极其困难的。农业占印度国内生产总值(GDP)的近30%,为该国近三分之二的人口提供生计。由于主要依赖雨水灌溉,印度农业容易受到降雨异常、害虫入侵和极端气候事件的影响。由于土著人民与环境和资源的密切关系,他们被认为是受气候变化影响最脆弱的群体之一。在气候紧急情况的背景下,本研究选择了来自印度不同农业生态区的多个土著部落,以探索基于土著传统知识(ITK)的农业实践对气候变化的适应潜力。被选中的部落分别是东喜马拉雅(Apatani)、西喜马拉雅(Lahaulas)、东高特(Dongria-Gondh)和西高特(Irular)的居民,分别代表雨林、寒冷沙漠、潮湿高地和雨荫景观。利用不同的政府间气候变化专门委员会(IPCC)情景,确定了气候变化对各区域的影响,并量化了适应气候变化的农业实践。初步结果表明,由于特别适应性的基于信息技术的农业实践,部落对气候变化具有中等到极端的敏感性和准备能力。制定了一项简短的政策,其中建议在土著部落之间进行知识交流和技术转让,以实现完全的气候变化复原力。
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Climate change resilient agricultural practices: A learning experience from indigenous communities over India
The impact of climate change on agricultural practices is raising question marks on future food security of billions of people in tropical and subtropical regions. Recently introduced, climate-smart agriculture (CSA) techniques encourage the practices of sustainable agriculture, increasing adaptive capacity and resilience to shocks at multiple levels. However, it is extremely difficult to develop a single framework for climate change resilient agricultural practices for different agrarian production landscape. Agriculture accounts for nearly 30% of Indian gross domestic product (GDP) and provide livelihood of nearly two-thirds of the population of the country. Due to the major dependency on rain-fed irrigation, Indian agriculture is vulnerable to rainfall anomaly, pest invasion, and extreme climate events. Due to their close relationship with environment and resources, indigenous people are considered as one of the most vulnerable community affected by the changing climate. In the milieu of the climate emergency, multiple indigenous tribes from different agroecological zones over India have been selected in the present study to explore the adaptive potential of indigenous traditional knowledge (ITK)-based agricultural practices against climate change. The selected tribes are inhabitants of Eastern Himalaya (Apatani), Western Himalaya (Lahaulas), Eastern Ghat (Dongria-Gondh), and Western Ghat (Irular) representing rainforest, cold desert, moist upland, and rain shadow landscape, respectively. The effect of climate change over the respective regions was identified using different Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) scenario, and agricultural practices resilient to climate change were quantified. Primary results indicated moderate to extreme susceptibility and preparedness of the tribes against climate change due to the exceptionally adaptive ITK-based agricultural practices. A brief policy has been prepared where knowledge exchange and technology transfer among the indigenous tribes have been suggested to achieve complete climate change resiliency.
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