Ocean salinity, early-life health, and adaptation

IF 5.5 3区 经济学 Q1 BUSINESS
Amanda Guimbeau , Xinde James Ji , Zi Long , Nidhiya Menon
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

We study the effects of in utero exposure to climate change induced high ocean salinity levels on children's anthropometric outcomes. Leveraging six geo-referenced waves of the Bangladesh Demographic and Health Surveys merged with gridded data on ocean salinity, ocean chemistry and weather indicators (temperature, rainfall and humidity) from 1993 to 2018, we find that a one standard deviation increase in in utero salinity exposure leads to a 0.11 standard deviation decline in height-for-age. Effects on weight-for-height and weight-for-age for a similar magnitude increase in salinity are 0.13 and 0.15 standard deviations, respectively. Analyses of parental investments and health-seeking behaviors demonstrate that compensating actions along these dimensions to attenuate the detrimental effects of salinity are few and restricted to poorer households. Using satellite-sourced datasets on agriculture and land-use, we find that increasing salinity constrains farmers' land use choices, restricting cultivation in the more profitable seasons which leads to lower agricultural potential. In particular, the effects of salinity on child health originate in areas with lower agricultural intensity caused by the progressive salinization of productive lands. These results highlight the climate change related costs of environmental insults on early-life health outcomes in vulnerable populations.

海洋盐度、生命早期健康和适应性
我们研究了暴露于气候变化引起的高海洋盐度对儿童人体测量结果的影响。利用 1993 年至 2018 年孟加拉国人口与健康调查的六次地理参照波,并结合海洋盐度、海洋化学和天气指标(温度、降雨量和湿度)的网格数据,我们发现,子宫内盐度增加一个标准差会导致身高-年龄下降 0.11 个标准差。盐度增加类似幅度对身高体重和年龄体重的影响分别为 0.13 和 0.15 个标准差。对父母投资和寻求健康行为的分析表明,在这些方面采取补偿行动以减轻盐度的不利影响的情况很少,而且仅限于贫困家庭。利用卫星来源的农业和土地利用数据集,我们发现盐度的增加限制了农民对土地利用的选择,限制了在利润较高的季节耕种,从而导致农业潜力降低。特别是,盐碱化对儿童健康的影响源自农业生产强度较低的地区,原因是生产用地逐渐盐碱化。这些结果凸显了与气候变化相关的环境污染对弱势人群生命早期健康结果造成的代价。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.00
自引率
4.30%
发文量
91
期刊介绍: The Journal of Environmental Economics and Management publishes theoretical and empirical papers devoted to specific natural resources and environmental issues. For consideration, papers should (1) contain a substantial element embodying the linkage between economic systems and environmental and natural resources systems or (2) be of substantial importance in understanding the management and/or social control of the economy in its relations with the natural environment. Although the general orientation of the journal is toward economics, interdisciplinary papers by researchers in other fields of interest to resource and environmental economists will be welcomed.
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