Mainstreaming ethnoclimatology for climate change assessment and adaptation in mountain ecosystems Online publication date: Fri, 23-Oct-2015
by Bhaskar Padigala
International Journal of Global Warming (IJGW), Vol. 8, No. 3, 2015
Abstract: Native communities inhabiting the Himalayan environment are mostly susceptible to environmental and other drivers of transformations but these communities have been living in the highly variable climatic environment for centuries and thus, possess an vast amount of localised traditional knowledge that has helped these communities to survive and thrive in such extreme ecosystem. But ongoing discourses on vulnerability and adaptation to climate change impacts these ethnic knowledge systems has not been given much of an importance. Hence, this study has tried to explore the different ethnoclimatological practices followed by local communities in Himachal Pradesh, India. Changing social and economic scenarios and inadequate governmental interventions are slowly leading to the disappearance of the traditional knowledge. However, local ethnoscientific knowledge has a tremendous potential to meet the challenges of climate change impacts. Hence, there is a need to integrate traditional knowledge with the scientific understandings to develop sustainable local or regional climate change assessment, mitigation and adaptation strategies that are best suited for the local ecosystem and involve local communities' participation.
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