4.6 Article

Adaptation from below to changes in species distribution, habitat and climate in agro-ecosystems in the Terai Plains of Nepal

Journal

AMBIO
Volume 48, Issue 12, Pages 1482-1497

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s13280-019-01202-0

Keywords

Autonomous adaptation; Biodiversity; Climate change; Ecosystem services; Land-use change; Local ecological knowledge

Funding

  1. Climate Change Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS) research program on Systemic Integrated Adaptation of the CGIAR at University of Oxford
  2. Biodiversity Institute at University of Oxford
  3. Long-term Ecology and Resource Stewardship Lab at University of Oxford
  4. Merton College at University of Oxford

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Recent land-use and climatic shifts are expected to alter species distributions, the provisioning of ecosystem services, and livelihoods of biodiversity-dependent societies living in multifunctional landscapes. However, to date, few studies have integrated social and ecological evidence to understand how humans perceive change, and adapt agro-ecological practices at the landscape scale. Mixed method fieldwork compared observed changes in plant species distribution across a climatic gradient to farmers' perceptions in biodiversity and climate change in rice-cultivated farms. In contrast to the global context, farmers in the Terai Plains of Nepal are acutely aware of high levels of change observed in the last 10 years, and incrementally adapt as new invasive species emerge (93%), the incidence and severity of pest/diseases increase (66%), genetic diversity of indigenous varieties erodes (65%), forest habitats diminish (98%), irrigation water declines (60%), and wildlife ranges shift. Twenty-five changes in climate were reported by 97.5% of farmers to reduce provisioning services and food self-sufficiency, and increase exposure to waterborne pathogens, heat stress, and human or livestock mortality. The study illustrates the need for financial and institutional supports at all levels to strengthen agro-ecological practices, upscale Information Communication Technology for extension services, clarify tenure agreements, and safeguard natural ecosystems to slow biodiversity loss. Existing incentives to conserve, restore, or sustainably manage ecosystems offer lessons for other societies undergoing rapid change.

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