TY - CHAP
T1 - Implication and management of coastal salinity for sustainable community livelihood
T2 - Case study from the Indian Sundarban Delta
AU - DasGupta, Rajarshi
AU - Shaw, Rajib
AU - Basu, Mrittika
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
PY - 2018/1/1
Y1 - 2018/1/1
N2 - Salinity is one of the major drivers of environmental change and a persistent stressor in coastal areas, often resulting from prolonged storm and tidal surge flooding. Especially in the case of the Asian megadeltas, where vast numbers of communities depend on coastal agriculture for their sole livelihood, salinity is compounding as an immediate as well as a potential threat for the future. It is further expected that the adverse impacts of unfavorable soil and inland water salinity will continue to rise with the onset of global sea level rise and subsequent hydrological changes. Under this backdrop, this chapter aims to understand the existing and potential threats of salinity in coastal agriculture and the challenges in sustaining the traditional agro-based livelihood in low-lying coastal areas. Focusing on the agro-rural communities of the lower Gangetic Delta (aka Indian Sundarban Delta), the study aims to understand the impact of salinity in local agricultural productivity, particularly with respect to the devastation caused by prolonged flooding during Cyclone Aila in 2009. Analyzing in detail the critical consequences of the salinity impacts on coastal agriculture, especially in the traditional rice cultivation practices, this chapter advocates for upscaling some of the potential farm level adaptation methods to negate the adverse impacts. In conclusion, the chapter argues the need for the development of an anticipatory agricultural adaptation plan and integration of “adaptation” within the existing scope of the “Integrated Coastal Zone Management” plan.
AB - Salinity is one of the major drivers of environmental change and a persistent stressor in coastal areas, often resulting from prolonged storm and tidal surge flooding. Especially in the case of the Asian megadeltas, where vast numbers of communities depend on coastal agriculture for their sole livelihood, salinity is compounding as an immediate as well as a potential threat for the future. It is further expected that the adverse impacts of unfavorable soil and inland water salinity will continue to rise with the onset of global sea level rise and subsequent hydrological changes. Under this backdrop, this chapter aims to understand the existing and potential threats of salinity in coastal agriculture and the challenges in sustaining the traditional agro-based livelihood in low-lying coastal areas. Focusing on the agro-rural communities of the lower Gangetic Delta (aka Indian Sundarban Delta), the study aims to understand the impact of salinity in local agricultural productivity, particularly with respect to the devastation caused by prolonged flooding during Cyclone Aila in 2009. Analyzing in detail the critical consequences of the salinity impacts on coastal agriculture, especially in the traditional rice cultivation practices, this chapter advocates for upscaling some of the potential farm level adaptation methods to negate the adverse impacts. In conclusion, the chapter argues the need for the development of an anticipatory agricultural adaptation plan and integration of “adaptation” within the existing scope of the “Integrated Coastal Zone Management” plan.
KW - Agricultural adaptation
KW - Coastal flooding
KW - Cyclone aila
KW - Indian sundarban delta
KW - Salinity
KW - Sustainability
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U2 - 10.1016/B978-0-12-810473-6.00013-3
DO - 10.1016/B978-0-12-810473-6.00013-3
M3 - Chapter
AN - SCOPUS:85083185931
SN - 9780128104750
SP - 251
EP - 269
BT - Coastal Management
PB - Elsevier
ER -