Details of Award
NERC Reference : NE/P020917/1
RCUK-SEA Identifying trade-offs of changing land use for aquatic environmental and socio-economic health and facilitating sustainable solutions
Grant Award
- Principal Investigator:
- Dr C Evans, NOC (Up to 31.10.2019), Science and Technology
- Co-Investigator:
- Professor R Sanders, University of Southampton, Sch of Ocean and Earth Science
- Co-Investigator:
- Dr M Mueller, Swinburne Uni of Tech (Sarawak Campus), Faculty of Engineering, Comp & Science
- Co-Investigator:
- Dr A Mujahid, Malaysia Sarawak Universitiy (UNIMAS), UNLISTED
- Co-Investigator:
- Dr C Thompson, University of Southampton, Sch of Ocean and Earth Science
- Co-Investigator:
- Professor CD Evans, UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology, Soils and Land Use (Bangor)
- Co-Investigator:
- Professor DJ Mayor, University of Exeter, Biosciences
- Grant held at:
- NOC (Up to 31.10.2019), Science and Technology
- Science Area:
- None
- Overall Classification:
- Unknown
- ENRIs:
- None
- Science Topics:
- Earth Resources
- Sediment/Sedimentary Processes
- Land - Ocean Interactions
- Earth Resources
- Econ, Pol & Env Anthropology
- Abstract:
- The economies of Southeast Asian countries (Malaysia, Indonesia, Vietnam, Thailand, the Philippines), and hence living standards of people living in this region, are intimately coupled to the ocean which is a valuable source of protein via fisheries and income via tourism. Many of these regions also contain valuable natural resources in the shape of forests and peatland which can be harvested for timber, converted to agricultural systems and which store carbon thus regulating the composition of our atmosphere and reducing the rate of global warming. Working out best how to extract resources from terrestrial systems with minimal impact on the coastal systems that they are linked to via rivers is an enormous challenge; logging and land clearance leads to soils entering rivers and coastal waters, changing their transparency, altering fisheries and ultimately losing carbon to the atmosphere. What is needed to understand the best way to manage these competing pressures on the natural environment is information about how it functions and about how the communities which use these systems will respond to likely changes. Putting together the natural scientists who think about soils, forests and rivers with those social scientists who understand what drives people to make the decisions about how they live their lives that they make is a massive challenge. However unless we do this we will only understand one half of the problem. In this project we will therefore both sample coastal waters and rivers in western Borneo to assess their functioning and health and assess the needs of the local communities via questionnaires and interviews. We will put these two halves of the project together via a series of workshops which we believe will better help Malaysia cope with environmental change and manage their natural resources in a sustainable manner. Key elements of the project involve sampling a range of disturbed and Undisturbed rivers and coastal waters, working out the key processes which lead to the loss of soil into the Marine environment, what happens to it and how it affects the ecosystem and looking at how these processes have changed over time and how people's exploitation of coastal espouses have evolved in parallel.
- NERC Reference:
- NE/P020917/1
- Grant Stage:
- Completed
- Scheme:
- Newton Fund
- Grant Status:
- Closed
- Programme:
- Newton Fund
This grant award has a total value of £80,686
FDAB - Financial Details (Award breakdown by headings)
DI - Other Costs | DI - T&S |
---|---|
£50,564 | £30,123 |
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