3.A - desertification Flashcards

1
Q

definition of desertification

A
  • outcome of persistent land degradation - drylands
  • causes reduction in agricultural capacity and productivity
  • human causes: deforestation, overgrazing and over-cultivation
  • physical causes: soil erosion and salinisation
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2
Q

those affected

A
  • 2B people affected
  • 168 countries affected
  • 74% poorest people directly affected
  • located: Sahel, Somalia, Ethiopia and Kenya = weak Govs and drought via climate change
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3
Q

change in farming practices - shifting cultivation

A
  • sustainable when population and carrying capacity equal
  • when pop pressure exceeds carrying capacity increases need for intensive methods
  • no fallow periods = no regeneration of soil
  • wind erosion and water erosion = farmers forced on ton fragile soils
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4
Q

water scarcity

A
  • increased cultivation in drylands via irrigation projects are unsuitable, poorly managed and underfunded
  • eg Lake Chad shrunk by 23,000km2 in 30years by an increased demand for irrigated water and damming of lakes feeding into the lake
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5
Q

demand for fuelwood

A
  • firewood demand for cooking and lighting
  • major cause of deforestation and desertification
  • high dependence: Burkina Faso 90%, Chad 89% and Mali 80%
  • nutrients ploughed back into the soil via ash (controversial bc of the release of co2)
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6
Q

rainfall patterns

A
  • desertification = negative feedback
  • drought = land degradation and desertification increase
  • precipitation decrease = drought
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7
Q

environmental impacts of desertification

A
  • decrease fertility
  • no fallow periods = decrease nutrients and food produce
  • wind and water erosion = decrease nutrients and yields
  • decreased in biodiversity
  • decrease in vegetation = change to ecosystems
  • increased dust formation, affects cloud form and rainfall patters
  • vulnerable to change = fluctuating harvest
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8
Q

economic impacts of desertification

A
  • decrease fuelwood = increase purchase of damaging fuel (kerosene) = increasing prices
  • food shortages increase food insecurity and dependency on food aid
  • decreased income - pastoralism and cultivation of crops
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9
Q

social impacts of desertification

A
  • drylands populations increase poverty, are marginalised and remote
  • increased migration, desertification refugees (males > females)
  • loss of traditional knowledge and skills = decrease in yields
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10
Q

political impacts of desertification

A
  • issues with migration cause conflict and disputes

- eg civil wars

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11
Q

spiral of decline resulting in desertification produces what kind of feedback?

A

positive feedback

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12
Q

how to mitigate against spiral of decline

A
  • improve sustainability of farming via irrigation methods and water management
  • drought resistant crops
  • maintaining soil nutrients via fallow fields, set-a-side and break crops
  • non-wood energy = solar, biogas and wind power
  • mixed farming methods
  • loans and grants remove link between agriculture and income as farmers etc can buy tools/ mobile phone to create microcredit scheme
  • contraception and education = increase goals/ ambition and diversify jobs
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