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Middleton, N., Rueff, H., Sternberg, T., Batjav, B. & Thomas, D. (2015). Explaining spatial variations in climate hazard impacts in Western Mongolia. Landscape Ecology. 30 (1), 91-107
N. Middleton et al., "Explaining spatial variations in climate hazard impacts in Western Mongolia", in Landscape Ecology, vol. 30, no. 1, pp. 91-107, 2015
@article{middleton2015_1732207986512, author = "Middleton, N. and Rueff, H. and Sternberg, T. and Batjav, B. and Thomas, D.", title = "Explaining spatial variations in climate hazard impacts in Western Mongolia", journal = "Landscape Ecology", year = "2015", volume = "30", number = "1", doi = "10.1007/s10980-014-0091-2", pages = "91-107", url = "https://www.springer.com/journal/10980" }
TY - JOUR TI - Explaining spatial variations in climate hazard impacts in Western Mongolia T2 - Landscape Ecology VL - 30 IS - 1 AU - Middleton, N. AU - Rueff, H. AU - Sternberg, T. AU - Batjav, B. AU - Thomas, D. PY - 2015 SP - 91-107 SN - 0921-2973 DO - 10.1007/s10980-014-0091-2 UR - https://www.springer.com/journal/10980 AB - The winter of 2009/2010 induced a mass loss of livestock known as dzud in Mongolia. We examine spatial heterogeneity in this livestock loss in a western Mongolian province using a semi-structured questionnaire, key informant interviews, meteorological station data, and two datasets derived from satellite imagery. We identify marked local variability in the impact of winter 2009/2010 demonstrated by a striking difference in livestock mortality between three Altai mountain districts and three Gobi desert districts. We explain this pattern with reference to site-specific circumstances. We ascertain a counter-intuitive pattern of milder winters with less snow in Mountain districts when compared to Desert districts, a contrast that was particularly acute in the winter of 2009/2010 which was uncommonly long and hard, with particularly deep and widespread snow cover in the Desert, but unusually mild in the Mountains. Examination of possible drivers of dzud vulnerability at the household and community levels—wealth and herder experience—found virtually no influence on livestock losses, although a large majority of herder households were characterised by a general lack of alternative income opportunities. The severity of conditions undermined many Desert herders’ coping and adaptive strategies, including communal pooling, although those who managed to move their herds in response to the 2009/2010 dzud suffered markedly smaller livestock losses. Limited government capacity, partly influenced by remoteness, further increased vulnerability in the Desert districts where the deep snow restricted access to dzud relief assistance. Implications for hazard management and governance are discussed, as are recent policy initiatives. ER -