Understanding the transition of community land use from shifting cultivation to cash cropping in southern Tanintharyi, Myanmar

Khin Htet Htet Pyone, R. Crego, Saw San Ngwe, Saw Di Win, Katherine J. LaJeunesse Connette, Melissa Songer, Grant M. Connette
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Abstract

Many tropical landscapes have experienced the loss of traditional cultivation practices as they have transitioned to other land use systems. The Tanintharyi Region of southern Myanmar is a landscape experiencing a rapid land use regime shift from traditional subsistence farming to permanent cash crop agriculture. Despite previous research in this region on the expansion of large‐scale agribusiness, such as oil palm and rubber plantations, little is known about how the small‐scale shifting cultivation system practiced by the local Karen ethnic people in Tanintharyi has changed over recent decades or the underlying reasons for this transition. Our study explores this transition process and its drivers from a social and land system change perspective in four villages of Bokpyin Township in Tanintharyi. We investigated the drivers of land cover and land use change by collecting information through focus groups and individual interviews with community members who previously practised shifting cultivation. We also quantified the overall change in land cover and land use through remote sensing analysis of Landsat 8 (2020) and declassified KH‐9 satellite imagery (1976). Prior to a period of civil war in the 1980s, cultivators used a traditional ‘slash‐and‐burn’ agricultural system for subsistence use. The present land use system is dominated by permanent betel nut cultivation, which represents the primary income source for farming households. The reported drivers of the transition to cash crop farming are greater income potential and livelihood security, risk of losing fallow land due to the needs for new cultivation areas for in‐migration and new centralized land use policies and administration after the national ceasefire agreement in 2012. The documented change in land use systems has been paired with a concurrent net loss of forest that, given the conflicted governance within the landscape, seems likely to continue without additional land use planning efforts. Our study contributes to an increased understanding of changes in shifting cultivation systems that are being documented globally. Furthermore, our example of combining qualitative interviews with analysis of historical satellite imagery to detect and explain land use regime shifts can serve as a model for future work in different landscapes. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.
了解缅甸德林达依省南部社区土地利用从轮垦向经济作物种植的转变
缅甸南部的德林达依地区正经历着从传统自给农作向永久性经济作物农业的快速土地利用制度转变。尽管以前曾对该地区大规模农业综合企业(如油棕和橡胶种植园)的扩张进行过研究,但人们对德林达依地区克伦族当地人的小规模轮耕制度在近几十年来发生了怎样的变化或这种转变的根本原因知之甚少。我们通过焦点小组和对以前从事轮垦的社区成员的个别访谈收集信息,调查了土地覆被和土地利用变化的驱动因素。我们还通过对 Landsat 8(2020 年)和解密的 KH-9 卫星图像(1976 年)进行遥感分析,量化了土地覆被和土地利用的总体变化。目前的土地使用系统以永久性槟榔种植为主,这是农户的主要收入来源。据报告,向经济作物种植过渡的驱动因素包括:更大的收入潜力和生计保障;因移民需要新的种植区而面临失去休耕地的风险;以及 2012 年全国停火协议签署后新的集中土地使用政策和管理。我们的研究有助于加深对全球轮垦系统变化的了解。此外,我们将定性访谈与历史卫星图像分析相结合来检测和解释土地使用制度的变化,可以作为今后在不同地貌中开展工作的范例。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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