Learning from episodes of degradation and recovery in variable Australian rangelands
- 26 December 2007
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 104 (52) , 20690-20695
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0704837104
Abstract
Land-change science emphasizes the intimate linkages between the human and environmental components of land management systems. Recent theoretical developments in drylands identify a small set of key principles that can guide the understanding of these linkages. Using these principles, a detailed study of seven major degradation episodes over the past century in Australian grazed rangelands was reanalyzed to show a common set of events: (i) good climatic and economic conditions for a period, leading to local and regional social responses of increasing stocking rates, setting the preconditions for rapid environmental collapse, followed by (ii) a major drought coupled with a fall in the market making destocking financially unattractive, further exacerbating the pressure on the environment; then (iii) permanent or temporary declines in grazing productivity, depending on follow-up seasons coupled again with market and social conditions. The analysis supports recent theoretical developments but shows that the establishment of environmental knowledge that is strictly local may be insufficient on its own for sustainable management. Learning systems based in a wider community are needed that combine local knowledge, formal research, and institutional support. It also illustrates how natural variability in the state of both ecological and social systems can interact to precipitate nonequilibrial change in each other, so that planning cannot be based only on average conditions. Indeed, it is this variability in both environment and social subsystems that hinders the local learning required to prevent collapse.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Global Desertification: Building a Science for Dryland DevelopmentScience, 2007
- Modeling the Recent Evolution of Global Drought and Projections for the Twenty-First Century with the Hadley Centre Climate ModelJournal of Hydrometeorology, 2006
- Forecasting Australian drought using Southern Hemisphere modes of sea-surface temperature variabilityInternational Journal of Climatology, 2004
- Aussie Grass: Australian Grassland and Rangeland Assessment by Spatial SimulationPublished by Springer Nature ,2000
- Learning From History to Survive in the Future: Management Evolution on Trafalgar Station, North-East Queensland.The Rangeland Journal, 1998
- Objective `Safe' Grazing Capacities for South-West Queensland Australia: Model Application and Evaluation.The Rangeland Journal, 1996
- Estimating Safe Carrying Capacities of Extensive Cattle-Grazing Properties Within Tropical, Semi-Arid Woodlands of North-Eastern Australia.The Rangeland Journal, 1994
- Northern Australian Savannas: Management for Pastoral ProductionJournal of Biogeography, 1990
- Nuture the Land: My philosophies of pastoral management in central Australia.The Rangeland Journal, 1986
- Management of Semi-Arid Ecosystems in IsraelPublished by Elsevier ,1979