Abstract

Pastoralism in the Himalayan region of Nepal has undergone significant socio-economic and ecological changes. While there are numerous contributing factors behind these changes, the effect of a changing climate has not been thoroughly studied. This paper adds a significant contribution to the knowledge base through analysis from a survey of 186 herder households, interviews with 38 key participants, and four focus group discussions with individuals from three National Parks and Conservation areas in the high-mountain region of Nepal. Additionally, a review of the existing policies and programs on pastoralism was carried out. Results demonstrate several reasons behind the decline of transhumance pastoralism: Policy focus on the establishment of conservation areas, increasing vulnerability to extreme events (avalanches, snowfall, storms, and disappearing water sources), and ineffective government policies and programs. Hardships involved in herding combined with changing social values and the degradation of pasture quality were identified as contributing factors to the growing challenges facing mountain pastoralism. Similarly, the declining interest among herders to continue their profession can be traced to vulnerability associated with escalating climate change impacts. Considerable knowledge gaps regarding threats to high-altitude pastoralism remain, and continued research on pastureland conservation, capacity development, facilitation for climate change adaptation, and coping strategies for herders in the high mountains is urgently needed. Our analysis suggests that non-climatic variables such as policy and globalization were more influential in eroding pastoralism as compared to climate change.

Highlights

  • Vulnerability is a pervasive facet of livelihoods in the Hindu Kush Himalaya (HKH) region and has always beena harsh reality of the high-mountain environment [1]

  • We found the farming of livestock to be one of the main occupations and income sources of the mountain pastoral communities followed by regular jobs and wage labor

  • Our analysis revealed that despite the strong socio-economic and ecological significance of traditional pastoralism in the mountain region, it is in a transitional phase due to increasingly diverse challenges involving the herding system

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Summary

Introduction

Vulnerability is a pervasive facet of livelihoods in the Hindu Kush Himalaya (HKH) region and has always beena harsh reality of the high-mountain environment [1]. Jodha [2] elucidated that mountains in the HKH regions have specific characteristics, such as fragility, marginality, inaccessibility, and poverty. These characteristics are expressed in the vulnerability of the mountain people. To a considerable degree, poverty and vulnerability overlap: Both being multidimensional in nature with common causes that lead to similar risks and outcomes [1]. This is further exacerbated by climate change and environmental degradation due to the local inhabitant’s dependence on ecosystem services for their livelihoods

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