Forests, water and mixed land use mosaics in developing countries: making research solutions effective

This paper summarises some of the prevailing issues and challenges in relation to forests and water. It highlights some of the key constraints to the utilisation of existing knowledge. Hydrological processes may be well understood at a plot level, or for a single particular land use/landcover type a...

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Autor principal: Spilsbury, M.J.
Formato: Capítulo de libro
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Forestry Cooperation Agency, Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries 2002
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18816
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author Spilsbury, M.J.
author_browse Spilsbury, M.J.
author_facet Spilsbury, M.J.
author_sort Spilsbury, M.J.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description This paper summarises some of the prevailing issues and challenges in relation to forests and water. It highlights some of the key constraints to the utilisation of existing knowledge. Hydrological processes may be well understood at a plot level, or for a single particular land use/landcover type at a catchment scale but become more uncertain at larger spatial scales or at smaller scales where the same processes operate across multiple land uses and management regimes. Most watershed management projects give little priority to research and monitoring, even though these are essential to effective watershed management and essential for establishing the efficacy of water management interventions. Given that interventions in mixed landscapes will be via multiple actors at a range of scales such monitoring feedback is essential to identifying, and reinforcing, those that are effective. Monitoring must track social, economic and biophysical variables that are useful and cost effective for management. The paper concludes that future research efforts should focus on how to maximise the provision of environmental services in mixed land use mosaics, and suggests how to improve research uptake and influence at policy levels since existing research has failed to sufficiently inform public policy debates. Consortium approaches to research that have close links to policy and development processes are required and should pay great attention to the factors and processes that influence research uptake in order to narrow the gulf between popular conventional wisdom, public policy and scientific knowledge.
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spelling CGSpace188162025-01-24T14:19:45Z Forests, water and mixed land use mosaics in developing countries: making research solutions effective Spilsbury, M.J. water resources land management forests land use policies developing countries watersheds conferences This paper summarises some of the prevailing issues and challenges in relation to forests and water. It highlights some of the key constraints to the utilisation of existing knowledge. Hydrological processes may be well understood at a plot level, or for a single particular land use/landcover type at a catchment scale but become more uncertain at larger spatial scales or at smaller scales where the same processes operate across multiple land uses and management regimes. Most watershed management projects give little priority to research and monitoring, even though these are essential to effective watershed management and essential for establishing the efficacy of water management interventions. Given that interventions in mixed landscapes will be via multiple actors at a range of scales such monitoring feedback is essential to identifying, and reinforcing, those that are effective. Monitoring must track social, economic and biophysical variables that are useful and cost effective for management. The paper concludes that future research efforts should focus on how to maximise the provision of environmental services in mixed land use mosaics, and suggests how to improve research uptake and influence at policy levels since existing research has failed to sufficiently inform public policy debates. Consortium approaches to research that have close links to policy and development processes are required and should pay great attention to the factors and processes that influence research uptake in order to narrow the gulf between popular conventional wisdom, public policy and scientific knowledge. 2002 2012-06-04T09:08:51Z 2012-06-04T09:08:51Z Book Chapter https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18816 en International Forestry Cooperation Agency, Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries Spilsbury, M.J. 2002. Forests, water and mixed land use mosaics in developing countries: making research solutions effective . In: Secretariat of the International Expert Meeting on Forest and Water (comp.). Proceedings of the Meeting on International Expert Meeting on Forests and Water, 20-22 November 2002, Shiga, Japan. :266-274. Tokyo, Japan, International Forestry Cooperation Agency, Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries.
spellingShingle water resources
land management
forests
land use
policies
developing countries
watersheds
conferences
Spilsbury, M.J.
Forests, water and mixed land use mosaics in developing countries: making research solutions effective
title Forests, water and mixed land use mosaics in developing countries: making research solutions effective
title_full Forests, water and mixed land use mosaics in developing countries: making research solutions effective
title_fullStr Forests, water and mixed land use mosaics in developing countries: making research solutions effective
title_full_unstemmed Forests, water and mixed land use mosaics in developing countries: making research solutions effective
title_short Forests, water and mixed land use mosaics in developing countries: making research solutions effective
title_sort forests water and mixed land use mosaics in developing countries making research solutions effective
topic water resources
land management
forests
land use
policies
developing countries
watersheds
conferences
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18816
work_keys_str_mv AT spilsburymj forestswaterandmixedlandusemosaicsindevelopingcountriesmakingresearchsolutionseffective