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Pastoral nomadism in the forest-steppe of the Mongolian Altai under a changing economy and a warming climate
Institution:1. Doctoral candidate, College of Environmental Sciences and Engineering, Peking University, P. R. China;2. Professor, College of Environmental Sciences and Engineering, Peking University, P. R. China;3. Associate Professor, Institute of Politics and Law, Shihezi University, Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, P. R. China;4. Associate Professor, School of Economics and Management, Shihezi University, Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, P. R. China;1. Agricultural Economics and Rural Policy Group, Wageningen University, The Netherlands;2. Development Economics Group, Wageningen University, The Netherlands;3. Department of Agricultural and Applied Economics, Mongolian University of Life Sciences, Mongolia
Abstract:The population structure, educational level and the livelihoods of 82 households of pastoral nomads, the organization of livestock husbandry and its impact on the grassland and forest ecosystems of the Dayan high valley (>2000 m a.s.l.) in the Mongolian Altai, western Mongolia, were surveyed using interviews and secondary information from official sources. Changes following the transition from centrally planned (before 1990) to market economy were analyzed. Two thirds of the monthly mean income of ca. 310 USD per nomad household is cash (ca. 55 USD) or non-cash (ca. 165 USD) income from livestock husbandry. Cashmere sale accounts for 70% of the cash income from livestock husbandry, which has led to a strong increase of goat numbers after 1990. Forests are used for livestock grazing, fuel wood collection, logging, and fruit collection. Livestock breeding and the seasonal migration of the nomad households are no longer organized by the government. To avoid transportation costs, two thirds of the families have reduced their seasonal migrations. This trend was favored by rising temperatures and earlier snowmelt during the last few decades, but resulted in a shortage of fodder and intensified forest use. Therefore, the use of grasslands and forests in the Mongolian Altai is no longer considered to be sustainable.
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