Closing the Adaptation Gap in Mountains

IF 1.7 4区 环境科学与生态学 Q4 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
G. McDowell, Madison E. Stevens, A. Lesnikowski, C. Huggel, A. Harden, J. DiBella, M. Morecroft, Praveen Kumar, E. Joe, I. Bhatt
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

Over 1 billion people are living at the frontlines of climate change in mountain areas, where warming rates outpace the global average and are driving significant changes in environments and ecosystem services. These changes are exacerbating socioeconomic difficulties faced by many mountain communities, and are already intensifying vulnerabilities across mountain areas globally. The situation is indicative of pervasive and consequential deficits in adaptation, and calls attention to the need for a better understanding of existing adaptation efforts, as well as the prospects for increasing the quantity and quality of adaptation action in mountain regions. In response, this MountainAgenda article introduces a conceptual framework for adaptation gaps. It then uses data from 2 major global-scale adaptation reviews to shed light on the nature and true magnitude of the adaptation gap in mountains. It reveals shortcomings in available adaptation options, deficits in the uptake of existing adaptation support, and a general lack of coherence between existing adaptations and keystone global agreements relevant to climate change adaptation. These shortcomings are largely related to soft limits to adaptation that constrain responses across mountain areas. In this article, we provide recommendations for closing the adaptation gap in mountains and suggest that this will require deeply collaborative efforts that are rooted in local needs, aspirations, and ways of knowing, but that are also supported by external capacity building and implementation resources. In many instances, this will resemble a transformative approach to adaptation. The conceptual framework presented here is broadly applicable and can also be utilized to identify and close adaptation gaps in social-ecological contexts beyond mountains.
缩小山区适应差距
超过10亿人生活在山区气候变化的前线,那里的变暖速度超过了全球平均水平,正在推动环境和生态系统服务的重大变化。这些变化加剧了许多山区社区面临的社会经济困难,并已经加剧了全球山区的脆弱性。这种情况表明适应方面普遍存在相应的不足,并提请注意需要更好地了解现有的适应努力,以及增加山区适应行动的数量和质量的前景。作为回应,《山区议程》的这篇文章介绍了适应差距的概念框架。然后,它使用来自两次主要的全球范围适应审查的数据来阐明山区适应差距的性质和真实程度。它揭示了现有适应选择方面的不足,缺乏对现有适应支持的吸收,以及现有适应与气候变化适应相关的关键全球协议之间普遍缺乏一致性。这些缺点在很大程度上与适应的软限制有关,这些软限制限制了山区的应对措施。在这篇文章中,我们提出了缩小山区适应差距的建议,并表示这将需要深入的合作努力,这些努力植根于当地的需求、愿望和了解方式,但也得到外部能力建设和实施资源的支持。在许多情况下,这将类似于一种变革性的适应方法。这里提出的概念框架具有广泛的适用性,也可用于确定和缩小山区以外社会生态环境中的适应差距。
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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来源期刊
Mountain Research and Development
Mountain Research and Development 地学-环境科学
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
18.80%
发文量
36
审稿时长
4.5 months
期刊介绍: MRD features three peer-reviewed sections: MountainDevelopment, which contains “Transformation Knowledge,” MountainResearch, which contains “Systems Knowledge,” and MountainAgenda, which contains “Target Knowledge.” In addition, the MountainPlatform section offers International Mountain Society members an opportunity to convey information about their mountain initiatives and priorities; and the MountainMedia section presents reviews of recent publications on mountains and mountain development. Key research and development fields: -Society and culture- Policy, politics, and institutions- Economy- Bio- and geophysical environment- Ecosystems and cycles- Environmental risks- Resource and land use- Energy, infrastructure, and services- Methods and theories- Regions
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