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Projekt Druckansicht

Funktionen und Nutzung von Feuchtgebieten afrikanischer Savannen im Wandel

Fachliche Zuordnung Pflanzenbau, Pflanzenernährung, Agrartechnik
Förderung Förderung von 2010 bis 2017
Projektkennung Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Projektnummer 165405448
 
Erstellungsjahr 2018

Zusammenfassung der Projektergebnisse

Land and water shortages are currently driving the use of wetland sites in East African savannah environments. Pastoralists, traditional subsistence farmers, and commercial farms increasingly compete for limited land and water resources. Transfers between wetlands and surrounding dryland savannahs are changing both on a material level and the social level. International interests interfere with the decision-making of local resource users and changes in wetland use are frequently linked to global processes. Ecosystem collapse phenomena and social conflicts increasingly centre on wetlands. The dynamics of the coupled biophysical and socio-cultural processes are seen to determine the resilience, collapse or eventually the reorganisation of agriculturally used wetlands. This chapter describes wetland ecosystem changes and documents the rapidly unfolding political ecology of initially two contrasting wetland systems in the East African savannah. The dynamics of the coupled biophysical and socio-cultural processes are determining the resilience, regulation, collapse, or eventually the reorganisation of agriculturally used wetlands. The activities focussed initially on urban and peri-urban communities in Naivasha and on chronosequences of land use on contrasting soil types in the riparian zone. Subsequently, we show the effects of encroaching and invasive species in the direct surroundings and the wider hinterlands of the Lake Baringo wetland, where human and animal densities are high, particularly during the dry season, and where recent land use changes are very pronounced. An interdisciplinary team addressed the following questions: How has wetland use changed and which are key drivers of this change? - How do wetlands respond to change and which thresholds can monitor these dynamics? - Which factors determine the capacity of the coupled social-ecological system to absorb changes, to recover from changes or to develop into a new system state? - What are the social and the ecological drivers of species invasiveness, and what are their impacts on resource base quality, the agro-ecosystems, and the social system? - How to biophysical, social and management factors interact, how do resource users respond to changes, and at what spatial-temporal scale?

Projektbezogene Publikationen (Auswahl)

 
 

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