An ecological basis for sustainable land use of Eastern Mauritanian wetlands
Cooper, A., Shine, T. , McCann, T., Tidane, D.A An ecological basis for sustainable land use of Eastern Mauritanian wetlands Journal of Arid Environments Volume 67, Issue 1, October 2006, Pages 116-141
Cooper, A., Shine, T. , McCann, T., Tidane, D.A An ecological basis
for sustainable land use of Eastern Mauritanian wetlands Journal of
Arid Environments Volume 67, Issue 1, October 2006, Pages
116-141
Abstract -The temporary wetlands of Eastern Mauritania in the Sahel
region of Africa, are productive systems in an arid environment.
Traditionally managed wetlands provide habitats for a wide range of
plant and animal species and support local livelihoods through
multiple land use. The heterogeneity and socio-economic importance
of the wetlands is reflected in a cultural nomenclature, but the
land use, environmental and biological basis of the nomenclature
has not been studied. In this paper, the cultural typology is
described from a structured field survey of site biophysical and
land use attributes recorded in a regional site inventory. A
numerical classification of inventory sites based on the plant
species used for food and materials (resource species), showed that
it was significantly associated with the cultural typology.
Ordination of the sites showed that key underlying environment
gradients significantly influencing resource species composition
were water availability and land use intensity. Each cultural type
occupied a unique location in ordination space corresponding to its
hydrology and land use. A site ordination based on animal wildlife
species composition showed that the duration of standing water was
a key significant explanatory variable, with land use intensity of
secondary importance. Analysis supports the view that traditional
land use is based on understanding environment, plant growth and
wildlife interactions and that this is the basis of sustainable
management. Recent schemes to develop single-use agricultural
systems by changing wetland shape and hydrology do not take
cultural typology or traditional use systems into account. We
propose that decisions on land use change at site and regional
landscape scales would benefit from considering traditional
management practices and that the cultural typology can be used as
an indicator of site development potential.



