Collaborative Research: Climate, human and ecosystem interactions in the face of a rapidly changing North Asian biome
合作研究:面对快速变化的北亚生物群系,气候、人类和生态系统的相互作用
基本信息
- 批准号:1737788
- 负责人:
- 金额:$ 45.95万
- 依托单位:
- 依托单位国家:美国
- 项目类别:Continuing Grant
- 财政年份:2017
- 资助国家:美国
- 起止时间:2017-09-01 至 2024-08-31
- 项目状态:已结题
- 来源:
- 关键词:
项目摘要
In many parts of the globe environmental change and socio-economic conditions are increasingly tied together producing regional vulnerabilities that are still poorly understood and under-anticipated. Northern Asia, and particularly the subarctic zone of southern Siberia and northern Mongolia, has experienced rates of warming that are so far unprecedented elsewhere and provide an opportunity for the early study of human and environmental impacts due to global warming. A Mongolian-American collaborative research team will investigate the three way relationship between pastoral nomadic food production, environmental robustness, and climate fluctuation in order to better understand principles of human organization that serve to sustainably manage this complex relationship. Pastoral nomadism is an indigenous Arctic and subarctic subsistence economy that sustains numerous populations from Mongolia to the Arctic Ocean and is known for its flexibility, stewardship of rangelands, and productive success within small-scale societies as well as nation states. By comparing early historical pastoralism and its socio-economic organization to environmental conditions and climate variation over more than a millennium, this project provides a deep-time perspective on sustainable and unsustainable practices in use today under a changing climate regime. This research aims to promote successful adaptation to environmental change on behalf of a broad spectrum of communities and lifeways and across national borders. The researchers believe that this research will help to sustain systems of indigenous food production throughout northernmost Asia with emphasis placed on maintaining local environments. The results have broader applicability to other pastoral nomadic regions of the world, most notably the African continent in terms of environmental and land use policy making. The project strengthens interdisciplinary collaboration and provides hands-on training for U.S. and Mongolian junior scholars, undergraduates, and graduate students in climatic bio-social science and cross-disciplinary research integration. The project framework relies on a combination of high-resolution historical and environmental data that will be analyzed as time series and compared across two time scales: a short sequence of 25 years (1990 to present) and a long-sequence of 1300 years (700 AD to present). Data from the past quarter-century will comprise 1) trends in forest productivity as revealed by the tree-ring record; 2) trends in steppe productivity; 3) ethnohistorical and ethnographic evidence of human use of these ecosystems in relation to recent socio-economic change; and 4) livestock population and mortality data. Contemporary patterns will be contextualized by more than one thousand years of climatic and socio-cultural observations. These will be compiled from tree-ring analysis, lake core and palynological studies, and from archaeological research, all of which provide alternate environmental indicators as well as a record of the relationship between nomadic pastoralists and the northern forest ecosystem. By juxtaposing the trajectory of the forest-steppe and human communities over time, this research develops new approaches and insight to the linkages between ecosystems, climate, human culture, and policy that promote long-term sustainability. Data and results will be widely disseminated through publications and public outreach but principally will be shared with and developed for the indigenous communities that rely on pastoralism across the Asian Arctic and subarctic biomes.
在全球许多地区,环境变化和社会经济条件日益紧密地联系在一起,产生了人们仍然知之甚少和未充分预期的区域脆弱性。 北亚,特别是西伯利亚南部和蒙古北部的亚北极地区,经历了迄今为止在其他地方前所未有的变暖速度,这为早期研究全球变暖对人类和环境的影响提供了机会。 蒙古-美国合作研究小组将调查游牧粮食生产、环境稳健性和气候波动之间的三向关系,以便更好地理解可持续管理这种复杂关系的人类组织原则。 游牧民族是一种本土的北极和亚北极自给经济,养活着从蒙古到北冰洋的众多人口,并以其灵活性、牧场管理以及小规模社会和民族国家内的生产性成功而闻名。 通过将早期历史畜牧业及其社会经济组织与一千多年来的环境条件和气候变化进行比较,该项目为当今在不断变化的气候制度下使用的可持续和不可持续做法提供了深入的视角。 这项研究旨在代表广泛的社区和生活方式并跨越国界,促进对环境变化的成功适应。 研究人员认为,这项研究将有助于维持整个亚洲北部的本土粮食生产系统,重点是维护当地环境。 研究结果在环境和土地利用政策制定方面对世界其他游牧地区有更广泛的适用性,尤其是非洲大陆。 该项目加强跨学科合作,为美国和蒙古的青年学者、本科生和研究生提供气候生物社会科学和跨学科研究整合的实践培训。该项目框架依赖于高分辨率历史和环境数据的组合,这些数据将作为时间序列进行分析,并在两个时间尺度上进行比较:25 年的短序列(1990 年至今)和 1300 年的长序列(公元 700 年至今)。 过去四分之一个世纪的数据将包括:1)树木年轮记录所揭示的森林生产力趋势; 2)草原生产力的趋势; 3) 人类利用这些生态系统与近期社会经济变化相关的民族历史和民族志证据; 4) 牲畜数量和死亡率数据。当代模式将受到一千多年气候和社会文化观察的背景影响。这些数据将根据树木年轮分析、湖泊核心和孢粉学研究以及考古研究进行汇编,所有这些都提供了替代环境指标以及游牧牧民与北部森林生态系统之间关系的记录。 通过将森林草原和人类群落随时间变化的轨迹并列起来,这项研究为生态系统、气候、人类文化和促进长期可持续性的政策之间的联系开发了新的方法和见解。 数据和结果将通过出版物和公共宣传广泛传播,但主要将与亚洲北极和亚北极生物群落依赖畜牧业的土著社区共享和开发。
项目成果
期刊论文数量(1)
专著数量(0)
科研奖励数量(0)
会议论文数量(0)
专利数量(0)
Online labs to introduce undergraduate students to scientific concepts and practices in tree-ring research
- DOI:10.1080/10899995.2021.1927567
- 发表时间:2021-05
- 期刊:
- 影响因子:0
- 作者:Nicole Davi;P. Pringle;F. Fiondella;J. Lockwood;R. Oelkers
- 通讯作者:Nicole Davi;P. Pringle;F. Fiondella;J. Lockwood;R. Oelkers
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Nicole Davi其他文献
Upper Irtysh River flow since AD 1500 as reconstructed by tree rings, reveals the hydroclimatic signal of inner Asia
- DOI:
DOI 10.1007/s10584-016-1814-y - 发表时间:
2016 - 期刊:
- 影响因子:
- 作者:
Feng Chen;Yujiang Yuan;Nicole Davi;Tongwen Zhang - 通讯作者:
Tongwen Zhang
An exploration of the motivations and barriers to being a foster parent in Florida
- DOI:
10.1016/j.childyouth.2021.106261 - 发表时间:
2021-12-01 - 期刊:
- 影响因子:
- 作者:
Nicole Davi;Jennifer Jones;Martie Gillen - 通讯作者:
Martie Gillen
Influence of non-climatic factors on the relationships between tree growth and climate over the Chinese Loess Plateau
黄土高原非气候因素对树木生长与气候关系的影响
- DOI:
10.1016/j.gloplacha.2015.06.008 - 发表时间:
2015-09 - 期刊:
- 影响因子:3.9
- 作者:
Keyan Fang;Dan Chen;Xiaohua Gou;Rosanne D'Arrigo;Nicole Davi - 通讯作者:
Nicole Davi
Warm-Season Annual to Decadal Temperature Variability for Hokkaido, Japan, Inferred from Maximum Latewood Density and Ring Width Data
- DOI:
10.1023/a:1013085624162 - 发表时间:
2002-01-01 - 期刊:
- 影响因子:4.800
- 作者:
Nicole Davi;Rosanne D'Arrigo;Gordon Jacoby;Brendan Buckley;Osamu Kobayashi - 通讯作者:
Osamu Kobayashi
Nicole Davi的其他文献
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{{ truncateString('Nicole Davi', 18)}}的其他基金
Collaborative Research: Socio-economic patterns, public perceptions, and climate vulnerabilities of water resources and quality
合作研究:社会经济模式、公众认知以及水资源和质量的气候脆弱性
- 批准号:
2127335 - 财政年份:2021
- 资助金额:
$ 45.95万 - 项目类别:
Standard Grant
Collaborative Research: Understanding the Impacts of Extreme Events on the Peoples of the Arctic
合作研究:了解极端事件对北极人民的影响
- 批准号:
2112463 - 财政年份:2021
- 资助金额:
$ 45.95万 - 项目类别:
Continuing Grant
Collaborative Research: Using Tree Rings to Develop Critical Scientific and Mathematical Thinking Skills in Undergraduate Students
合作研究:利用树木年轮培养本科生批判性的科学和数学思维能力
- 批准号:
1405664 - 财政年份:2014
- 资助金额:
$ 45.95万 - 项目类别:
Standard Grant
Collaborative Research: Using Tree Rings to Develop Critical Scientific and Mathematical Thinking Skills in Undergraduate Students
合作研究:利用树木年轮培养本科生批判性的科学和数学思维能力
- 批准号:
1245609 - 财政年份:2014
- 资助金额:
$ 45.95万 - 项目类别:
Standard Grant
AGS-PRF: Towards a Dynamical Understanding of Climate Induced Disaster in Mongolian: Identifying Mechanisms, Change and Vulnerability
AGS-PRF:动态理解蒙古语气候引发的灾害:识别机制、变化和脆弱性
- 批准号:
1137729 - 财政年份:2012
- 资助金额:
$ 45.95万 - 项目类别:
Fellowship Award
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