土著人民和当地社区气候变化影响报告的一致性取决于现场情况

Christoph Schunko, Santiago Álvarez-Fernández, Petra Benyei, Laura Calvet-Mir, André B. Junqueira, Xiaoyue Li, Anna Porcuna-Ferrer, Anna Schlingmann, Emmanuel M. N. A. N. Attoh, Rosario Carmona, Fasco Chengula, Álvaro Fernández-Llamazares, Priyatma Singh, Miquel Torrents-Ticó, Victoria Reyes-García
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引用次数: 0

摘要

原住民和当地社区深受气候变化的影响。调查当地对气候变化影响的理解及其分布模式,对于有效支持监测和适应战略至关重要。在这项研究中,我们旨在了解气候变化影响报告的一致性,以及在地点和个人层面上影响一致性的因素。我们在 iTaukei(斐济)、Dagomba(加纳)、fisherfolks(坦桑尼亚)、Tsimane'(玻利维亚)、Bassari(塞内加尔)、ribeirinhos(巴西)、Mapuche(智利)、蒙古(中国)、西藏(中国)和 Daasanach(肯尼亚)社区中开展了跨文化研究,使用了半结构式访谈、焦点小组和对 1860 人的调查。我们发现,在不同文化背景下,三分之二以上关于气候变化影响的个人报告与现场确认的报告一致。与农作物生产和野生植物采集相比,与畜牧业相关的变化报告的一致性更高。个人对大自然的体验、土著和地方知识以及当地家庭根基与不同地点的一致性没有显著关联,但与具体地点的关联却很普遍。尽管不同地点之间的平均一致性较高,但地点特定因素(包括生计活动、社会文化背景和环境条件)造成的差异也相当大。在气候变化监测和适应规划中,需要考虑地点背景和气候变化影响报告中的相关一致性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Consistency in climate change impact reports among indigenous peoples and local communities depends on site contexts

Consistency in climate change impact reports among indigenous peoples and local communities depends on site contexts
Indigenous Peoples and local communities are heavily affected by climatic changes. Investigating local understandings of climate change impacts, and their patterned distribution, is essential to effectively support monitoring and adaptation strategies. In this study, we aimed to understand the consistency in climate change impact reports and factors influencing consistency at site and individual levels. We conducted cross-cultural research among iTaukei (Fiji), Dagomba (Ghana), fisherfolks (Tanzania), Tsimane’ (Bolivia), Bassari (Senegal), ribeirinhos (Brazil), Mapuche (Chile), Mongolian (China), Tibetan (China) and Daasanach (Kenya) communities using semi-structured interviews, focus groups, and surveys among 1860 individuals. We found that cross-culturally more than two-thirds of individual reports of climate change impacts match site-confirmed reports. Consistency in reports is higher for changes related to pastoralism than crop production and wild plant gathering. Individual’s experience with nature, Indigenous and local knowledge, and local family roots are not significantly associated with consistency across sites, but site-specific associations are prevalent. Despite high average consistency among sites, there is considerable variation caused by site-specific factors, including livelihood activities, socio-cultural settings, and environmental conditions. Site contexts and related consistency in climate change impact reports need to be taken into account for climate change monitoring and adaptation planning.
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