Desertification - 

"The rapid depletion of plant life and the loss of topsoil at desert boundaries and in semiarid regions, usualy caused by a combination of drought and the overexploitation of grasses and other vegetation by people."

Ségou: desertification in outlying fields.
Ségou: desertification in outlying fields.

Current Conditions

Present-day Drylands and their Categories [Web Graphic]. Retrieved from http://www.greenfacts.org/en/desertification/images/appendix-a-620.jpg
Present-day Drylands and their Categories [Web Graphic]. Retrieved from http://www.greenfacts.org/en/desertification/images/appendix-a-620.jpg

Desertification takes place in drylands all over the world (see present day drylands in danger of desertification in the map above). It occurs everywhere but Antartica. It is one of the greatest environmental threats today, because all drylands are threatened by desertification. Around 6-12 million square kilometers (10-20%) of drylands may already be degraded (greenfacts.org). It is difficult to estimate the numbers of drylands undergoing desertification because there have been very broad and few assessments.

 

Desertification. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://www.greenfacts.org/en/desertification/index.htm

 

Current most endangered regions:

  • Sonoran Desert (northwest Mexico)
  • Southwest United States
  • Atacama Desert (South America)
  • Kalahari Desert (Southern Africa)
  • Most of Austrailia
  • the large desert mass made up of the Sahara, Arabian, Great Indian, Taklimakan, Gobi, and the deserts of Iran and Former Soviet Union

 

Desertification (around deserts). (n.d.). Retrieved from https://confluence.furman.edu:8443/display/GGY230F10/Desertification (around deserts)

Future Research and Limitations

“Population growth and increase in food demand will drive expansion and intensification of cultivated lands if unchecked, desertification and degradation of ecosystem services in dry lands will threaten future improvements in human well-being and possibly reverse gains in some regions.”

According to current research on the future of desertification, this environmental issue will continue as long as mankind continues to live in the way that it does; although there can ways to continue to help prevent it involving social, global and economic management. Ecosystems and Human Well-Being: Desertification Synthesis gives us the following as ways to preserve ecosystems.

  • Globalized world with reactive ecosystem management; with an emphasis on equity, economic growth, and public goods such as infrastructure and education.
  •  Regionalized world with reactive ecosystem management; with an emphasis on security and economic growth.
  •  Regionalized world with proactive ecosystem management, with an emphasis on local adaptations and learning.
  • Globalized world with proactive ecosystem management, and an emphasis on green technologies.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Adeel, Zafar, Uriel Safriel, David Niemeijer, and Robin White. "Ecosystems and Human Well-Being: Desertification Synthesis." Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (2005): 9-11. Web. 8 Dec. 2013. <http://www.millenniumassessment.org/documents/document.355.aspx.pdf>

Pattern of Human Behavior

The use of our natural resources is quite literally bleeding the planet dry. Climate change is also said to be a contributing factor to desertification and this can also be traced back to human kind taking everything that this planet has to offer for their own. Organizations, corporations and greed are at the root of this because people will take far more than they need to survive and leave so little for other life. This is leaving our Earth dry and brittle and in need of more nourishment than we are leaving behind.

There is more we can do as a society to combat this greed and use what we are given in a way that is more beneficial for our planet. 

 

****

 

 

“Policies leading to unsustainable resources and lack of supportive infrastructure are major contributors to land degradation. Conversely, this makes public policies and physical infrastructure useful intervention points. Thus agriculture can play either a positive or negative role, depending on how it is managed. This in turn depends on socioeconomic resources available, the policies adopted, and the quality of govern acne. Local institutions, such as community based land use decision making bodies and social networks, can continue to preventing desertification by allowing land users to manage and use ecosystems more efficiently through enhanced access to land, capital, labor and technology.”

 

Adeel, Zafar, Uriel Safriel, David Niemeijer, and Robin White. "Ecosystems and Human Well-Being: Desertification Synthesis." Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (2005): 9-11. Web. 8 Dec. 2013. <http://www.millenniumassessment.org/documents/document.355.aspx.pdf>

Policies/Incentives

Green Wall of China [Web Photo]. Retrieved from http://www.futuretimeline.net/21stcentury/images/green-wall-of-china.jpg
Green Wall of China [Web Photo]. Retrieved from http://www.futuretimeline.net/21stcentury/images/green-wall-of-china.jpg

China and all of the Sahel countries (except Libya) tried to implement a "green wall". Basically it was vegetation like trees planted to try to reduce land degradation. This was supposed to act like a barrier to prevent the advancing sands of the Gobi Desert (futuretimeline.net). This failed because the trees planted were foreign and it killed local vegetation. In addition to it killing the vegetation, farmers cut down the trees to use for firewood. After this failed, countries tried to spread education on a large scale about desertification. Sustainable farming practices were attemped to be implemented, but many farmers could not afford to follow them because they were expensive.

A framework of policies were created, but could not be implemented as well as they should have been because of the lack of social motivation and incentives (for example, the "green wall" project).These policies were ineffective and unsuccessful. Also local scientists have little opportunity to influence policies and legal frameworks, so they can not contribute their knowledge on the subject. Research for development projects is insufficiently done in close collaboration with, and for the benefit of, local dryland communities (Re-thinking Policies 13).

 

The kinks in the current framework of policies are being discussed and worked out to improve the policies and incentives to be more effective and successful.

 

Some of the areas that need to be improved to make an effective and successful policy are:

  • Improving awareness (More information sharing)
  • Gaining more information and data on desertification
  • Mainstream the implemented policy
  • Better incentives
  • Harmonize definition of drylands and desertification
  • Implementing affordable and sustainable farming practices
  • Etc.

We can look at what Latin America identified 6 factors to related success in improved environmental management and desertification control:

  • Participatory institutional development
  • Promotion of education and research
  • Decentralized action at the regional and municipal levels
  • Quantitative impact assessment
  • Investment of government resources
  • Incentives for land restoration and conservation

 

References

 

 

Adeel, Z., Bogardi, J., Braeuel, C., Chasek, P., Niamir-Fuller, M., Gabriels, D.,… & Thomas, R. (2006). Re-thinking policies to cope with desertification. Retrieved from http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/shared/bsp/hi/pdfs/28_06_07unreportdesert.pdf

 

 

Desertification (around deserts). (n.d.). Retrieved from https://confluence.furman.edu:8443/display/GGY230F10/Desertification (around deserts)

 

Green Wall of China [Web Photo]. Retrieved from http://www.futuretimeline.net/21stcentury/images/green-wall-of-china.jpg

 

 

 

Present-day Drylands and their Categories [Web Graphic]. Retrieved from http://www.greenfacts.org/en/desertification/images/appendix-a-620.jpg

 

Ségou: desertification in outlying fields. [Photograph]. In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved fromhttp://www.britannica.com.ezproxy1.lib.asu.edu/EBchecked/media/107790/Signs-of-desertification-in-fields-located-on-the-outskirts-of

"The World Day to Combat Desertification Is Monday, 17 June." UNCCD. N.p., n.d. Web. 10 Dec. 2013.

"China to Enact Anti-Desertification Law." China to Enact Anti-Desertification Law. N.p., 26 Feb. 2001. Web. 10 Dec. 2013.

"Desertification." GreenFacts. N.p., n.d. Web. 10 Dec. 2013.

Sussman, Daniel. "Design Manual: Contour Trenches." Bebuffered. N.p., n.d. Web. 10 Dec. 2013. <http://www.bebuffered.com/downloads/sussman_contour_trenches.pdf>.

Current Conditions & Policies/Incentives by Melanie

Alternative Resources

There are alternatives that can be used as remedies for desertification. Although prevention is the most efficient way to combat it, there are methods for reversesing the effects. 

Reforestation is a method that can be incredibly effective in making a desert into a lush sustainable evironment. Many believe that deserts can not support a large amount of plant life and that this is why they are currently deserts. This is not true. Most desertification is caused my human intervention and plenty of deserts were once very green. 

For example, even old planting techniques can still work in desertified areas. In the Sahara, a group of locals planted numerous amounts of Eucalyptus and pine trees by hand, digging a hole and watering each seed by hand. Although labor intensive, the project succeeded and a once desertified area was now green and supporting life.

This is a shot of the area before reforestation was done.
This is a shot of the area before reforestation was done.
This is after. Many of the trees were not full grown yet, but the difference is incredible.
This is after. Many of the trees were not full grown yet, but the difference is incredible.

Contour trenching is another method used to combat desertification. The method involved digging 1 meter deep trenches in soil parallel to the surface. This type of trenching enhances water balance and prevent water from evaporating and going to waste. 

 

Education and Legislation

Education is one of the most important steps in attempting to solve desertification. By teaching people all over the world that there are ways to prevent and reverse the effects of desertification, the world is one step closer to being greener. 

June 17th is World Day to Combat Desertification. The UNCCD and other organizations use this day to highlight the dangers of desertification and what we can all do to help.

Legislation regarding desertification can be hard to come by, but it does exist. China is one of the world's leaders when it comes to anti-desertification laws. China has been hit extremely hard by the effects of desert expansion. Their deserts grow by about 2500 square kilometers per year and have lost 100,000 acres of land to deserts since 1950. Last spring alone, the country was hit by 13 harsh sandstorms, which was a devastating hit to both the people and the economy of China.

With strict guidelines and countrywide government assistance, Chinese officials hope to greatly reduce the spread of deserts and restore once lush green areas to their former status.

Re-Thinking Policies to Cope with Desertification
Re-Thinking Policies to Cope with Desert
Adobe Acrobat Document 1.7 MB

Welcome!

This site is an ongoing project of Dr. Perla A. Vargas and her students in Environmental Psychology at New College of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences, Arizona State University, AY 2013-2014.

 

© 2013-2014 Please give credit to authors when citing. The viewpoints expressed on this site are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views and policies of ASU.

ASU logo