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DISCUSSION No. 151 • FSN Forum digest No. 1354
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Addressing water scarcity in agriculture: how can indigenous or traditional practices help?
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Deadline extended until 06 July 2018
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Dear Members,
We thank you for your very insightful contributions to the online discussion "Addressing
water scarcity in agriculture: how can indigenous or traditional practices help?". Below we share with you the latest of your comments as well as some feedback by Patrick Bahal'okwibale, co-facilitator of the discussion.
Your comments are a confirmation of the wealth of knowledge embedded in local, traditional or indigenous practices.
Furthermore, your contributions are also testimonies to the potential of indigenous knowledge systems to offset the effects
of climate and address the increasing water scarcity.
To give you some additional time to share your insights we have
extended the deadline until Friday, 6th July.
In case you have already contributed, we invite you to read through the contributions of other members, taking advantage
of the coming days to further enrich this exchange.
Please see the full introduction to this online discussion in
English,
French or
Spanish on the
FSN Forum website.
As always, you can take part in the exchange by posting your comment directly online in either
English,
French or
Spanish or by sending an email to
[log in to unmask].
We look forward to keep receiving your comments,
Your FSN Forum team
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Patrick Bahal'okwibale, co-facilitator of the discussion
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Dear Colleagues,
The contributions you have been providing are so impressive. As I was reading through them, I am realizing how much valuable
knowledge is embedded in local, traditional or indigenous practices. The most promising is that your contributions represent testimonies that the practices could offer such huge opportunities for adaptation to climate change and address the increasing water
scarcity.
I have also experienced a traditional practice of sensing the environment to predict an imminent rain: if it feels warm,
it will likely rain. Similarly, if a sunny day feels so cool, one should not expect any rain. Every time I check this, it reveals true to me. While I learned this long ago from my grandparents, I have never had the chance to see published evidence that explains
this phenomenon. However, I later realized that the same sensations are experienced when an air conditioner is set to increase humidity in the environment: the sensation of heat on the skin could thus be greatly influenced by air humidity. With regards to
the indigenous early warning practice, the sensation of heat (or cool) was thus simply a reflection of increasing air moisture leading to a forecasted rainfall (or decreasing air moisture leading to the forecast of absence of rains).
I am surely not the only one to have been impressed by such traditional effective practices, yet poorly documented in
scientific journals. It would thus be opportune if contributions could also address such a barrier.
At this stage, we would be happy if members could read through others' contributions and check if they have additional
references that support any of the member's submission. We would really love to receive any such links before the closing of the forum.
Many thanks in advance!
Patrick
Read
the contribution online
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CONTRIBUTIONS RECEIVED
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Cecilia
Akita, FAO, Ghana
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Cecilia informs us about certain rivers in Ghana being held a deities, a practice that helps keeping water bodies protected
and well managed.
Read
the contribution
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Vivian
Onyango, FAO, Italy
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Vivian focuses on traditional water management systems used by pastoralists.
To prevent degradation of both water and pastures, communal management is often employed to guide movement across the landscape in accessing water and pasture resources. Under such communal governance systems, decisions on when to construct new wells, who is
responsible and who has access are negotiated by the entire community.
Read
the contribution
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Eileen
Omosa, We Grow Ideas, Canada
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Eileen tells us about “community forests", which were common in many parts of Africa. Access to these particular forests
came with clear roles, benefits and responsibilities: who could access which forest, when, what forest products to harvest (fruits, firewood, timber, herbs), and how much.
Read
the contribution
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Rob
Blakemore, VermEcology, Japan
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Rob highlights the role of earthworms in increasing soil water storage and infiltrability.
Read
the contribution
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Gerhard
Flachowsky, Federal Research Institute for Animal Health, Germany
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Gerhard stresses the importance of having a long term programme to overcome water scarcity.
He sees the need for more research activities and political willingness to move towards a sustainable utilization of naturally limited and non-renewable resources such as water, fuel, arable land, etc..
Read
the contribution
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Vijay
Vallabh Barthwal, India
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Vijay introduces various types of rainwater storage such as the traditional
Taanka system. He also suggests improving these indigenous practices to allow them to become more efficient.
Read
the contribution
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Andrew
Isingoma, Rwanda Agriculture Board, Rwanda
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Andrew describes a series of practices that impact water availability such as livestock rearing, water harvesting and
storing, forest, wetlands and fisheries management, and weather forecasting systems.
Read
the contribution
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Mithare
Prasad, Shuats Up, India
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Mithare gives a detailed insight into traditional Indian water management systems together with some concrete proposals
on how to address water scarcity issues.
Read
the contribution
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Bongani
Ncube, Cape Peninsula University of Technology, South Africa
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Bongani argues that more debate is needed on how we define indigenous knowledge, as the current definition portrays indigenous
knowledge as an attribute of less technologically advanced societies.
She also suggests focusing more on exploring the transferability of indigenous knowledge from one cultural and geographic context to another.
Read
the contribution
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