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Local ecological knowledge and incremental adaptation to changing flood patterns in the Amazon delta
Authors:Nathan Vogt  Miguel Pinedo-Vasquez  Eduardo S Brondízio  Fernando G Rabelo  Katia Fernandes  Oriana Almeida  Sergio Riveiro  Peter J Deadman  Yue Dou
Institution:1.Núcleo de Altos Estudos Amaz?nicos (NAEA), Federal University of Pará and Geography and Regional Planning,University of Valley Paraíba – Brazil,Belém,Brazil;2.Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR) and Earth Institute Center for Environmental Sustainability (EICES),Columbia University,NY,USA;3.Department of Anthropology,Indiana University,Bloomington,USA;4.Forestry Department,State University of Amapá,Macapá, AP,Brazil;5.International Research Institute for Climate and Society (IRI),Columbia University,NY,USA;6.Núcleo de Altos Estudos Amaz?nicos (NAEA),University Federal of Pará – Brazil,Belém,Brazil;7.Geography and Environmental Management,University of Waterloo, Waterloo,Canada
Abstract:The need for understanding the factors that trigger human responses to climate change has opened inquiries on the role of indigenous and local ecological knowledge (ILK) in facilitating or constraining social adaptation processes. Answers to the question of how ILK is helping or limiting smallholders to cope with increasing disturbances to the local hydro-climatic regime remain very limited in adaptation and mitigation studies and interventions. Herein, we discuss a case study on ILK as a resource used by expert farmer-fishers (locally known as Caboclos) to cope with the increasing threats on their livelihoods and environments generated by changing flood patterns in the Amazon delta region. While expert farmer-fishers are increasingly exposed to shocks and stresses, their ILK plays a key role in mitigating impacts and in strengthening their adaptive responses that are leading to a process of incremental adaptation (PIA). We argue that ILK is the most valuable resource used by expert farmer-fishers to adapt the spatial configuration and composition of their land-/resource-use systems (agrodiversity) and their produced and managed resources (agrobiodiversity) at landscape, community and household levels. We based our findings on ILK on data recorded for over the last 30 years using detailed ethnographic methodologies and multitemporal landscape mapping. We found that the ILK of expert farmer-fishers and their “tradition of change” have facilitated the PIA to intensify a particular production system to optimize production across a broad range of flood conditions and at the same time to manage or conserve forests to produce resources and services.
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