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Herder observations of pasture and hydro-climatic changes in Mongolia

Abstract

Mongolia's climate is extreme and changing with long, cold winters, and dry, hot summers. Mongolia has many sunny days, and precipitation tends to be low. Climate change has altered Mongolian rangelands over the years, from declining water sources and forage production, to shifting boundaries of the ecological zones. With increasing temperatures and extreme precipitation events, climate change is expected to continue to alter rangeland conditions. In addition to climate change, overgrazing contributes to land degradation, leading to desertification in some areas of Mongolia. To combat land degradation community-based rangeland management (CBRM) programs were implemented in some soums (counties) in Mongolia, however they can only be successful if they incorporate the existing institutions that coordinate pastoralist mobility. In this thesis, herder interviews were combined with station and remote sensing data to assess changes in pasture and climate over ecozones in Mongolia, considering the impact of CBRM initiatives. This study focused on interviewing herders from community managed and non-managed soums to use their traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) to assess change. Herder surveys answered both close-ended questions on a 5-point Likert scale about changes observed in climate, snow, rivers, lakes, springs, and rangeland conditions, and open-ended questions on causes, impacts, and adaptations to climate and rangeland conditions across three ecozones (forest steppe, steppe, and desert steppe) for a pair of soums in each ecozone, one with community-based managed and the other without (3 ecozones x 2 soums). Using the different datasets, we compared the remote sending data on rangeland conditions variability and station data on temperature and precipitation variability versus the herder responses to close-ended questions across the ecozone-management pairs, evaluated herder responses from open-ended questions on the causes, impacts, and adaptations to changes in climate and rangeland conditions in comparison to the herder responses to open-ended questions by soum and ecozones, and combined the sensor variability versus the degree of consensus (complete agreement) among herder closed-ended responses to explain herder responses to causes, impacts, and adaptations. Herder observations and remote sensing data were in agreement for changes in the pasture conditions and precipitation. Herder responses and station data were less in agreement for temperature trends, depending on the season. The open-ended questions about causes, impact, and adaptation of pasture change corresponded to the overall climatic and pasture changes observed by station–remote sensing data and from the closed-ended questions. Key reasons for change were rain and water, dzud (Mongolian winter extreme weather), wind, sand, dust, and desertification, and livestock. These heavily impact livestock, quality of life, and money. Adaptation to change were to prepare the livestock better through making and purchasing hay in the north, and more movement to follow vegetation and water in the south.

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Subject

land use planning
range management
environmental management
remote sensing
natural resource management

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