气候变化条件下克拉马斯河流域土著文化生态系统服务和效益的概念及其对土地管理和治理的影响

IF 2.9 3区 社会学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY Journal of Ethnobiology Pub Date : 2021-10-01 DOI:10.2993/0278-0771-41.3.313
Megan Mucioki, J. Sowerwine, Daniel Sarna‐Wojcicki, Frank K. Lake, Shawn D. Bourque
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引用次数: 9

摘要

摘要在加利福尼亚州北部和俄勒冈州南部的克拉马斯河流域(KRB),与气候相关的变化,如更强烈的干旱、多样化和集中的降水、早春和晚秋的条件、极端温度和积雪减少,导致了越来越不可预测的植物繁殖和收获周期。在这项研究中,我们探索了KRB中植物和土著人之间的当代关系,确定了土著人培育和采集具有文化意义的植物所带来的文化生态系统服务(CES)的好处,并根据气候变化的观测和经验讨论了这些服务可能如何变化。本研究有助于土著文化生态系统服务(ICES)的概念化,为将土著概念、方法和观点纳入生态系统服务评估(ES),特别是CES提供了一个框架。它强调了土著人对气候变化对植物繁殖和生产力影响的看法和观察的价值,以及它们对文化生态系统在不断变化的气候条件下的复原力和适应能力的贡献。我们建议,将土著人的概念和方法纳入评估消费电子产品和生态系统,可以带来更全面的管理决策和更明智的气候适应举措,为所有人带来更大的生态系统。
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Conceptualizing Indigenous Cultural Ecosystem Services (ICES) and Benefits under Changing Climate Conditions in the Klamath River Basin and Their Implications for Land Management and Governance
Abstract. In the Klamath River Basin (KRB) of northern California and southern Oregon, climate-related changes, such as more intense droughts, varied and concentrated precipitation, earlier spring and later fall conditions, extreme temperatures, and decreased snowpack have contributed to increasingly unpredictable plant reproduction and harvest cycles. In this study, we explore contemporary relationships between plants and Indigenous People in the KRB, identifying benefits of cultural ecosystem services (CES) derived from Indigenous stewarding and gathering of culturally significant plants, and discuss how these services may change based on climate change observations and experiences. This study contributes to the conceptualization of Indigenous Cultural Ecosystem Services (ICES), providing a framework for the incorporation of Indigenous concepts, approaches, and perspectives into assessments of ecosystem services (ES) and, particularly, CES. It highlights the value of Indigenous perspectives and observations of climate change effects on plant reproduction and productivity, as well as their contribution to cultural ecosystem resilience and adaptation under changing climate conditions. We propose that incorporating Indigenous concepts and approaches to assessing CES and ES could lead to more holistic management decisions and better-informed climate adaptation initiatives with greater ES for all.
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来源期刊
Journal of Ethnobiology
Journal of Ethnobiology Social Sciences-Anthropology
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
3.40%
发文量
21
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: JoE’s readership is as wide and diverse as ethnobiology itself, with readers spanning from both the natural and social sciences. Not surprisingly, a glance at the papers published in the Journal reveals the depth and breadth of topics, extending from studies in archaeology and the origins of agriculture, to folk classification systems, to food composition, plants, birds, mammals, fungi and everything in between. Research areas published in JoE include but are not limited to neo- and paleo-ethnobiology, zooarchaeology, ethnobotany, ethnozoology, ethnopharmacology, ethnoecology, linguistic ethnobiology, human paleoecology, and many other related fields of study within anthropology and biology, such as taxonomy, conservation biology, ethnography, political ecology, and cognitive and cultural anthropology. JoE does not limit itself to a single perspective, approach or discipline, but seeks to represent the full spectrum and wide diversity of the field of ethnobiology, including cognitive, symbolic, linguistic, ecological, and economic aspects of human interactions with our living world. Articles that significantly advance ethnobiological theory and/or methodology are particularly welcome, as well as studies bridging across disciplines and knowledge systems. JoE does not publish uncontextualized data such as species lists; appropriate submissions must elaborate on the ethnobiological context of findings.
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