Litcius/Paper detail

Food security in high mountains of Central Asia: A broader perspective

Roy C. Sidle, Aziz Ali Khan, Arnaud Caiserman, Aslam Qadamov, Zulfiqor Khojazoda

2023BioScience33 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Addressing food security in high mountains is a multidimensional conundrum because of complex climate patterns and environmental attributes. These conditions affect water supplies, biodiversity, droughts, and other hazards. The climate change–land degradation nexus, although it is difficult to disentangle, poses formidable challenges. Isolated mountain villages, coupled with poverty, a strained subsistence existence, conflict, and marginal lands make the residents vulnerable to malnutrition, stunting, and food access. Because the arable land is mostly in confined valleys, food production is insufficient. The soils are typically infertile, with little organic matter; on hillslopes, thin soil and rock cover, coupled with short growing seasons, restrict crop production. High-elevation pastures are overgrazed, and the natural hazard impacts on food security are often overlooked. We examine food security through these multifaceted stressors, instead of merely focusing on production and distribution, and present an integrated approach to assess natural and anthropogenic stressors and feedback loops affecting food security linked to planning, mitigation, and coping strategies.

Topics & Concepts

Food securitySubsistence agricultureGeographyFood processingArable landNatural resource economicsEnvironmental protectionAgroforestryEnvironmental scienceEnvironmental resource managementEnvironmental planningAgriculturePolitical scienceEconomicsLawArchaeologyRangeland Management and Livestock EcologyTransboundary Water Resource ManagementTree-ring climate responses
Food security in high mountains of Central Asia: A broader perspective | Litcius