What is it about?
Brazil's Mixed Ombrophilous Forest stills resist to deforestation, logging, land-use change, and now, climate change thanks to its inhabitants: Indigenous Peoples and Traditional Communities. We asked how could climate change disrupt this socio-ecological system by acessing their Traditional Ecological Knowledge.
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Why is it important?
We found that that the human-forest interaction confers resilience to potential disturbances. And we projected that socio-ecological knowledge might be also threatened to climate change within Araucaria Forests. We have reinforced the necessity to acknowledge to these human groups their relevance by maintaining these ecosystems stand and protected.
Perspectives
I like this publication because its holistic point of view of conservation + IPLC + climate change factors.
Mario Tagliari
Faculdade Municipal de Educação e Meio Ambiente
Read the Original
This page is a summary of: Disrupting a socio-ecological system: could traditional ecological knowledge be the key to preserving the Araucaria Forest in Brazil under climate change?, Climatic Change, January 2023, Springer Science + Business Media,
DOI: 10.1007/s10584-022-03477-x.
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