No longer tracking greenery in high altitudes: Pastoral practices of Rupshu nomads and their implications for biodiversity conservation
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/6060Date
2013Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Nomadic pastoralism has thrived in Asia’s rangelands for several millennia by tracking seasonal changes in forage
productivity and coping with a harsh climate. This pastoralist lifestyle, however, has come under intense
transformations in recent decades due to socio-political and land use changes. One example is of the high-altitude
trans-Himalayan rangelands of the Jammu and Kashmir State in northern India: major socio-political reorganisation
over the last five decades has significantly impacted the traditional pasture use pattern and resources. We outline
the organizational transformations and movement patterns of the Rupshu pastoralists who inhabit the region. We
demonstrate the changes in terms of intensification of pasture use across the region as well as a social
reorganisation due to accommodation of Tibetan refugees following the Sino-Indian war in 1961 to 1962. We focus
in particular on the Tso Kar basin - an important socio-ecological system of livestock herding and biodiversity in the
eastern Ladakh region. The post-war developmental policies of the government have contributed to these
modifications in traditional pasture use and present a threat to the rangelands as well as to the local biodiversity. In
the Tso Kar basin, the number of households and livestock has almost doubled while pasture area has declined by
half. These changes have potentially negative consequences for the long-term resilience of nomadic pastoralism as
well as for the survival of rare local wildlife. To increase the pastoralist standard of living, having fewer pastoralists
may be the only solution, and alternative livelihood options may bring this about. Development programmes
should concentrate on enhancing opportunities for herders so that there is a greater diversity of employment
opportunities and potentially better chances for the persistence of biodiversity.
Publisher
SpringerCitation
Pastoralism: Research, Policy and Practice (2013), vol. 3:16Metadata
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