Climate Change Adaptation and Mitigation in the Seaflower Biosphere Reserve: From Local Thinking to Global Actions
English
This open access book addresses the following topics for the Seaflower Biosphere Reserve (BR) in the Colombian Archipelago of San Andrés, Providencia, and Santa Catalina, in the southwest Caribbean Sea, which is the worlds largest BR and contains representative ecosystems of tropical island regions.
Future regional climate behavior and forms of balanced relationships between humans and nature to promote climate change (CC) adaptation and mitigation strategies for tropical islands.
The relevance of BRs as ideal locations to study and replicate interdisciplinary adaptation strategies. BRs are living, dynamic laboratories where local communities demonstrate safe and sustainable development possibilities. Island and coastal tropical BRs disproportionately face adverse effects of CC, making them a research priority with unprecedented intellectual challenges for their unique characteristics.
This collaborative effort
Stimulates critical and interdisciplinary thinking around tropical island regions
Presents new and different angles to understand local socioenvironmental impacts of CC
Demonstrates the linkage between ecosystem services, human well-being, and CC adaptation
Connects local experiences to global dynamics and processes, and vice versa
Places the struggles and knowledge of the indigenous Raizal people at the forefront of CC and BR studies
Examines relevant socioenvironmental pathways toward collective action for adaptive capacity, resilience, and ultimately contributes to sustainable development processes in BRs worldwide.
This book was financed by the Corporation Center of Excellence in Marine Sciences (CEMarin).
See moreWill deliver when available. Publication date 05 Jan 2025