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Precipitation variability and adaptation strategies in the southern Yucatán Peninsula, Mexico: integrating local knowledge with quantitative analysis

Márdero Jiménez, Silvia Sofía [autora] | Schmook, Birgit Inge [autora] | Christman, Zachary John [autor/a] | Nickl Alcocer, Elsa Cristina [autora] | Schneider, Laura [autora] | Rogan, John [autor] | Lawrence, Deborah [autora].
Tipo de material: Capítulo de libro
 en línea Capítulo de libro en línea Tipo de contenido: Texto Tipo de medio: Computadora Tipo de portador: Recurso en líneaTema(s): Cambio climático | Agricultura tradicional | Estrategias de adaptaciónTema(s) en inglés: Climatic changes | Traditional farming | Coping strategiesDescriptor(es) geográficos: Reserva de la Biosfera Sian Ka'an (Quintana Roo, México) | Reserva de la Biosfera Calakmul (Campeche, México) Nota de acceso: Disponible para usuarios de ECOSUR con su clave de acceso En: International Perspectives on Climate Change / W. Leal Filho, F. Alves, S. Caeiro, U.M. Azeiteiro, (eds.). Switzerland, German : Springer International Publishing, 2014. páginas 189-201. --ISBN: 978-331-9044-88-0Número de sistema: 13384Resumen:
Inglés

Climatic variability, including droughts, has long affected the Mayan Lowlands. Therefore, farmers have developed coping strategies to mitigate these impacts. In the past, however, records of these effects and responses were largely anecdotal. In modern times, the perceptions of farmers, especially those practicing rain-fed agriculture, combined with the increased availability of accurate historical climatic records and forecasts, can provide useful information regarding periods of decreased precipitation and strategies employed to resist and respond to drought effects. As part of the multidisciplinary and inter-institutional project, New Knowledge about Ecosystem Level Response to Increased Frequency of Large-Scale Natural Disturbance Driven by Climate Change, this chapter outlines the spatial and temporal variability of precipitation across the Southern Yucatán Peninsula, Mexico, and examines Mayan farmers' adaptations to droughts and other climate perturbations. The authors analyzed precipitation trends and anomalies from 1953 to 2007, using linear regressions and the quintile method to classify meteorological droughts. Authors also conducted 150 household interviews across 10 communities to investigate Mayan farmers' adaptations to climate perturbations. Results demonstrate a significant decrease in annual and rainy season precipitation across much of the study area, coupled with an increased occurrence of droughts, especially since 1980. Interviewed subsistence maize farmers have adapted to decreasing and irregular precipitation by adjusting agricultural calendars, planting more maize varieties, increasing water storage, and diversifying their practices both within the agricultural system and beyond it. Through this research, the authors demonstrate the importance of incorporating farmers' local and traditional knowledge into prevention and mitigation policies of governmental and non-governmental institutions in the region.

Lista(s) en las que aparece este ítem: Birgit Inge Schmook
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Disponible para usuarios de ECOSUR con su clave de acceso

Climatic variability, including droughts, has long affected the Mayan Lowlands. Therefore, farmers have developed coping strategies to mitigate these impacts. In the past, however, records of these effects and responses were largely anecdotal. In modern times, the perceptions of farmers, especially those practicing rain-fed agriculture, combined with the increased availability of accurate historical climatic records and forecasts, can provide useful information regarding periods of decreased precipitation and strategies employed to resist and respond to drought effects. As part of the multidisciplinary and inter-institutional project, New Knowledge about Ecosystem Level Response to Increased Frequency of Large-Scale Natural Disturbance Driven by Climate Change, this chapter outlines the spatial and temporal variability of precipitation across the Southern Yucatán Peninsula, Mexico, and examines Mayan farmers' adaptations to droughts and other climate perturbations. The authors analyzed precipitation trends and anomalies from 1953 to 2007, using linear regressions and the quintile method to classify meteorological droughts. Authors also conducted 150 household interviews across 10 communities to investigate Mayan farmers' adaptations to climate perturbations. Results demonstrate a significant decrease in annual and rainy season precipitation across much of the study area, coupled with an increased occurrence of droughts, especially since 1980. Interviewed subsistence maize farmers have adapted to decreasing and irregular precipitation by adjusting agricultural calendars, planting more maize varieties, increasing water storage, and diversifying their practices both within the agricultural system and beyond it. Through this research, the authors demonstrate the importance of incorporating farmers' local and traditional knowledge into prevention and mitigation policies of governmental and non-governmental institutions in the region. eng

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