Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gxg78 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-25T05:21:33.619Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Conservation in the Sikkim Himalaya: Traditional Knowledge and Land-use of the Mamlay Watershed

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 August 2009

Rakesh Chandra Sundriyal
Affiliation:
Respectively Scientist, Scientist in Charge, and Scientist, G.B. Pant Institute of Himalayan Environment & Development, Sikkim Unit, PO Tadong, Sikkim 737102, India.

Extract

The ecological problems, including degradation of fragile ecosystems, of the Himalaya are quite conspicuous. A rapid depletion of forest resources is the main cause of environmental degradation and economic deterioration. Watersheds are considered as a unit for natural resource management and development in hilly areas; therefore a case-study of Mamlay watershed of Sikkim is presented in this paper.

The Mamley watershed presents a viable system having a gradient of altitude where almost all types of land-uses that are common in the eastern Himalaya are found. All the ethno-cultural groups of Sikkim are present in this watershed, although the agricultural sector provides the main land-use, followed by forestry. Most of the forested areas in the Himalaya have been purportedly destroyed for the expansion of agricultural land. A similar situation was experienced in the Mamlay watershed, where an increase of 12.79% of the land-area used for agriculture has been recorded in the past 40 years. The watershed being fragile, 62% of the area is under intensive agricultural practice. Land-use and spatial relationships in the perspective of conservation are presented in this paper.

Great genetic diversity of agricultural crops and trees has been recorded in this small watershed. Conservation ethics of optimum utilization/production of the resources, following traditional practices without much degrading of the system which is believed to be sustainable, was practised earlier in the watershed. But recently, due to population pressure and fragmentation of farm-owning families, the balance of land-use, natural resource utilization, and conservation, has become perturbed. Examples of traditional adaptation, indigenous knowledge, and perception of conservation amongst farm-owning families, are also presented in the paper.

Type
Main Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Foundation for Environmental Conservation 1994

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Brush, S.B. (1976). Cultural adaptations to mountain ecosystems: Introduction. Human Ecology, 4(2), pp. 125–33.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mahat, T.B.S. (1987). Forestry-farming linkages in the mountains. (ICIMOD Occasional Paper No. 7.) International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development, Kathmandu, Nepal: [not available for checking].CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McNeely, J.A. (1990). How conservation strategies contribute to sustainable development. Environmental Conservation, 17(1). pp. 913.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Möench, M. & Bandyopadhyay, J. (1986). People-forest interactions: A neglected parameter in Himalayan forest management. Mountain Research and Development, 6(1), pp. 316.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schroeder, R.F. (1985). Himalayan subsistence systems: Indigenous agriculture in rural Nepal. Mountain Research and Development, 5(1), pp. 3144.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sharma, E. & Ambasht, R.S. (1988). Nitrogen accretion and its energetics in the Himalayan Alder. Functional Ecology, 2, pp. 229–35.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sharma, E. & Ambasht, R.S. (1991). Biomass, productivity, and energetics in Himalayan Alder plantations. Annals of Botany, 67, pp. 285–93.Google Scholar
Sharma, E., Sundriyal, R.C., Rai, S.C., Bhatt, Y.K., Rai, L.K., Sharma, R. & Rai, Y.K. (1992). Integrated Watershed Management. Gyanodaya Prakashan, Nainital, India: 120 pp.Google Scholar
Stone, L. (1990). Conservation and human resources: Comments on four case-studies from Nepal. Mountain Research and Development, 10(1), pp. 56.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thapa, G.B. & Weber, K.E. (1990). Actors and factors of deforestation in ‘tropical Asia’. Environmental Conservation, 17(1), pp. 1927, 2 figs and 2 tables.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wentworth, C.K. (1930). A sample method of determining the average slope of land surfaces. American Journal of Science Series, 5(20), pp. 185–93.Google Scholar