scholarly journals Implications of Impacts of Climate Change on Forest Product Flows and Forest Dependent Communities in the Western Ghats, India

2014 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
pp. 189-200
Author(s):  
Indu K. Murthy ◽  
Savithri Bhat ◽  
Vani Sathyanarayan ◽  
Sridhar Patgar ◽  
Beerappa M. ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
Vol 193 (12) ◽  
Author(s):  
T. M. Sharannya ◽  
K. Venkatesh ◽  
Amogh Mudbhatkal ◽  
M. Dineshkumar ◽  
Amai Mahesha

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sundar Shunmuga Velayutham ◽  
Daniel Paiva Silva ◽  
Fabio de Oliveira Roque ◽  
Juliana Simião Ferreira ◽  
Jani Heino

Abstract Climate change is a matter of worldwide concern with severe predicted impacts on biodiversity. Here, we analysed the potential impacts of current and future climates on aquatic true bugs (Heteroptera) in relation to their distribution patterns and ecological preferences (based on a database generated from existing literature references and field collections). We considered the traits as ‘species thermal range’ and ‘emergence period’ to evaluate the future climate change impacts on the distributions of aquatic true bugs in the riverine regions of a tropical biodiversity hotspot, the Western Ghats of India. We used Species Distribution Models (SDMs) to evaluate the potential impacts of climate change on the distributions of aquatic true bugs. We modelled the distributions of twenty-six species of aquatic true bugs using different modelling tools through a carefully examined set of occurrence records to generate potential present distributions and to project these distributions into future scenarios of climate change. We observed increasing/decreasing range sizes of the species in the current and future scenarios. We found losses and increases of species' ranges in some regions, but not much variation in species richness. Similarly, no significant effect was observed in the distribution ranges for species with different duration of emergence period and thermal range in current and future climatic scenarios. Losses and gains in species richness would be concentrated in the mountainous area of the Western Ghats, whereas loss of species and the bigger difference between current and future richness will occur in the adjacent lowlands and towards central regions, including the network of protected areas of the Western Ghats. These areas are critical to buffer regional species loss in the future.


2018 ◽  
Vol 19 ◽  
pp. 94-105 ◽  
Author(s):  
Malay Pramanik ◽  
Uttam Paudel ◽  
Biswajit Mondal ◽  
Suman Chakraborti ◽  
Pratik Deb

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarath Pullyottum Kavil ◽  
Prabhakaran Ramya Bala ◽  
Pankaj Kumar ◽  
Devanita Ghosh ◽  
Raman Sukumar

AbstractHuman migration in response to climate change during the Holocene has been recorded in many regions of the world. The Todas are a pastoralist people who are believed to have colonized the higher elevations (>2000 m asl) of the Nilgiris in the Western Ghats, India, not earlier than about 2000 cal. yr BP. Vegetation shifts in response to changing climate in tropical montane forest-grassland mosaic of the Ghats have been well documented using stable carbon isotopes and pollen profiles; however, there have been no corresponding investigations of human presence and activity at the highest elevations. We used a number of other proxies to infer the human ecology of this montane region. Radiocarbon dated (~22,000 cal. BP to the present) peat samples from the Sandynallah basin (2200m asl, Nilgiri hills, Tamil Nadu State) were used to reconstruct fire history, animal abundance, and human presence since the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). While the macro-charcoal record indicates fires at the LGM, macro- and micro-charcoal counts indicate intense fire at ~3500 cal. yr BP, coprophilous fungal spores indicate a large population of herbivorous mammals, and steroid biomarkers indicate human faecal remains for the first time. This period is also characterized by dry arid conditions and dominant grassy vegetation as inferred from n-alkane signatures. We thus infer that a pastoralist people, most likely the Todas, migrated to the highest elevations of the Western Ghats along with their buffalo herds in response to prolonged or abrupt climate change in peninsular India, about 3500 cal. yr BP or at least 1500 years prior to what historical accounts assume.


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