Local Perceptions of Climate Variability and Change in Tropical Forests of Papua, Indonesia

People everywhere experience changes and events that impact their lives. Knowing how they perceive, react, and adapt to climatic changes and events is helpful in developing strategies to support adaptation to climate change. Mamberamo in Papua, Indonesia, is a sparsely populated watershed of 7.8 mi...

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Main Authors: Manuel Boissière, Bruno Locatelli, Douglas Sheil, Michael Padmanaba, Ermayanti Sadjudin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2013-12-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol18/iss4/art13/
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spelling doaj-6103a9530c39468890e633e135bbe7042020-11-24T22:44:21ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872013-12-011841310.5751/ES-05822-1804135822Local Perceptions of Climate Variability and Change in Tropical Forests of Papua, IndonesiaManuel Boissière0Bruno Locatelli1Douglas Sheil2Michael Padmanaba3Ermayanti Sadjudin4Centre de coopération Internationale en Recherche Agronomique pour le Développement (CIRAD)Centre de coopération Internationale en Recherche Agronomique pour le Développement (CIRAD)Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR)Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR)Conservation InternationalPeople everywhere experience changes and events that impact their lives. Knowing how they perceive, react, and adapt to climatic changes and events is helpful in developing strategies to support adaptation to climate change. Mamberamo in Papua, Indonesia, is a sparsely populated watershed of 7.8 million hectares possessing rich tropical forests. Our study compares scientific and traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) on climate, and analyzes how local people in Mamberamo perceive and react to climatic variations. We compared meteorological data for the region with local views gathered through focus group discussions and interviews in six villages. We explored the local significance of seasonality, climate variability, and climate change. Mamberamo is subject to strikingly low levels of climatic variation; nonetheless local people highlighted certain problematic climate-related events such as floods and droughts. As our results illustrate, the implications vary markedly among villages. People currently consider climate variation to have little impact on their livelihoods when contrasted with other factors, e.g., logging, mining, infrastructure development, and political decentralization. Nonetheless, increased salinity of water supplies, crop loss due to floods, and reduced hunting success are concerns in specific villages. To gain local engagement, adaptation strategies should initially focus on factors that local people already judge important. Based on our results we demonstrate that TEK, and an assessment of local needs and concerns, provide practical insights for the development and promotion of locally relevant adaptation strategies. These insights offer a foundation for further engagement.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol18/iss4/art13/adaptive strategycoping mechanismdeforestationecosystem servicesgenderseasonalitytraditional ecological knowledge
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Manuel Boissière
Bruno Locatelli
Douglas Sheil
Michael Padmanaba
Ermayanti Sadjudin
spellingShingle Manuel Boissière
Bruno Locatelli
Douglas Sheil
Michael Padmanaba
Ermayanti Sadjudin
Local Perceptions of Climate Variability and Change in Tropical Forests of Papua, Indonesia
Ecology and Society
adaptive strategy
coping mechanism
deforestation
ecosystem services
gender
seasonality
traditional ecological knowledge
author_facet Manuel Boissière
Bruno Locatelli
Douglas Sheil
Michael Padmanaba
Ermayanti Sadjudin
author_sort Manuel Boissière
title Local Perceptions of Climate Variability and Change in Tropical Forests of Papua, Indonesia
title_short Local Perceptions of Climate Variability and Change in Tropical Forests of Papua, Indonesia
title_full Local Perceptions of Climate Variability and Change in Tropical Forests of Papua, Indonesia
title_fullStr Local Perceptions of Climate Variability and Change in Tropical Forests of Papua, Indonesia
title_full_unstemmed Local Perceptions of Climate Variability and Change in Tropical Forests of Papua, Indonesia
title_sort local perceptions of climate variability and change in tropical forests of papua, indonesia
publisher Resilience Alliance
series Ecology and Society
issn 1708-3087
publishDate 2013-12-01
description People everywhere experience changes and events that impact their lives. Knowing how they perceive, react, and adapt to climatic changes and events is helpful in developing strategies to support adaptation to climate change. Mamberamo in Papua, Indonesia, is a sparsely populated watershed of 7.8 million hectares possessing rich tropical forests. Our study compares scientific and traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) on climate, and analyzes how local people in Mamberamo perceive and react to climatic variations. We compared meteorological data for the region with local views gathered through focus group discussions and interviews in six villages. We explored the local significance of seasonality, climate variability, and climate change. Mamberamo is subject to strikingly low levels of climatic variation; nonetheless local people highlighted certain problematic climate-related events such as floods and droughts. As our results illustrate, the implications vary markedly among villages. People currently consider climate variation to have little impact on their livelihoods when contrasted with other factors, e.g., logging, mining, infrastructure development, and political decentralization. Nonetheless, increased salinity of water supplies, crop loss due to floods, and reduced hunting success are concerns in specific villages. To gain local engagement, adaptation strategies should initially focus on factors that local people already judge important. Based on our results we demonstrate that TEK, and an assessment of local needs and concerns, provide practical insights for the development and promotion of locally relevant adaptation strategies. These insights offer a foundation for further engagement.
topic adaptive strategy
coping mechanism
deforestation
ecosystem services
gender
seasonality
traditional ecological knowledge
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol18/iss4/art13/
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