building conservation capacity through higher education in...

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The Amazon rainforest plays a vital role in the maintenance of regional climate systems, biodiversity, the carbon cycle and the water cycle. Despite this, the Amazon rainforest is increasingly threatened due to infrastructure expansion, in-migration and advance of the agricultural frontier, and extractive development. Amazonian universities are particularly important to reconciling conservation and development in the region given they train the future professionals and decision makers most likely to reside permanently in the Amazon. However, Amazonian faculty and students not only lack access to cutting edge scientific theories and tools, but also are increasingly urban, and thus removed from the forested landscapes and waterways most important for conserving biodiversity and mitigating climate change. The Ucayali (National University of Ucayali - Peru) (UNU)- Richmond (University of Richmond - USA) (UR) partnership financed by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) through the American Council for Education’s (ACE) Higher Education for Development Program (HED), is one of four international alliances for improving university education in Colombia, Ecuador and Peru under the Initiative for the Andean Amazon Conservation II: Program for Higher Education. The program seeks to strengthen conservation science capacity through the improvement of applied research, student training, and public sector engagement in biodiversity conservation. Our partnership initiative, “Building Conservation Capacity in a Changing Amazonia,” uses innovative and interdisciplinary approaches to teach the sustainable use of tropical resources in the dynamic Southwestern Amazonia. Building Conservation Capacity through Higher Education in the Peruvian Amazon Andrea B. Chavez¹ ², Stella Han³, Edgar Díaz Zúñiga², David Salisbury³, Roly Baldoceda Astete², ¹Universidad Nacional de Ucayali, Pucallpa, Perú ² Universidad Nacional Amazónica de Madre de Dios, Puerto Maldonado, Perú ³University of Richmond, VA, USA A collaborative partnership in the Peruvian Amazon NGO Research Mentorship UNU Professor UNU Thesis Students Applied Science Research Design Student provides skilled labor NGO provides opportunity and mentorship NGO research project expands Conservation network expands Professor provides official mentorship Student provides excellence for mentor Science capacity grows URRA adds scientific rigor NGO research project expands Conservation network expands UNU professor and student engage in collaborative training Science capacity grows UNU capacity and learning network expands NGO capacity and learning network expands Participatory field methods Includes local / indigenous territories Increased regional conservation capacity by expanding NGO-GO science projects with applied UNU theses research Thesis students have shown increased scientific and place-based knowledge along with increased conservation skills during the project implementation based on critical thinking, skills training, and experiential activities. Student field work has expanded interdisciplinary, applied environmental research in poorly understood remote areas with high biological and cultural diversity and has built trust with communities through extension activities. The project enhanced faculty-mentor relationships, improved pedagogy and teaching content in science and field methods, provided publication outlets, and integrated university, NGO, and GO personnel into a professional community of scholars. Fig.2 Students applying critical thinking. Fig.3 Students learning technical skills. Fig.5 Students participating in experiential learning activities. Fig.6 Applied field work in remote areas. Fig.4 Students engage Indigenous in group discussions. A c k n o w l e d g m e n t s Many thanks to Tessie Peña, Amanda Salazar, Tammy Hicks, Rita Riva, Nancy Propst, Jorge Rivas, Mary Finley-Brook, Rafael de Sa, Peter Smallwood, Javier del Águila, Francisco Estremadoyro, Jorge Miranda, Foster Brown, Sandra Ríos, Raúl Gutiérrez, Paulo Sima, Peter Cronkleton, Bruno Locatelli, Aoife Bennett-Curry, Anne Larson, Jose Saito, David Moreno, Grober Panduro, Aparicio Limachi, Tedy Tuesta, Fernando Velásquez, David Moreno, Franz Tang, SERNANP, the Municipality of Yurua, ACONADYISH, the indigenous communities of Santa Rosa, El Dorado, Doradillo, Nueva Victoria, Dulce Gloria and people from Breu, San Mateo, Santa Rosita de Abujao, Caserio 24 de Septiembre. 1. UNU campus in one the most deforested areas of Peru 2. Forest, culture, and biodiversity rich Yurua research site. Pucallpa 2 1 2. YURUA 3. PURUS University students train in Ucayali’s capital of Pucallpa to conduct project activities and research within the remote, bio- and culturally diverse Purús and Yurua watersheds of the Peruvian Amazon Basin. The Purús and Yurua contain more than 40 indigenous communities from 11 ethnic groups living in large expanses of biodiversity- and carbon-rich standing forest. Research integrates both university students and indigenous communities in participatory research to train current and future leaders to reflect critically on natural resource management as indispensable to our planet’s climate stability. Our project model broadens student skill sets (composed by theory, skills and practice) so they can analyze linked socio-ecological systems from an interdisciplinary, environmental science perspective and communicate to a range of stakeholders including policy makers, local communities, and the urban Amazon public. Education and research partners CIFOR, ProPurús, IBC, Woods Hole Research Center, and the Ucayali Government help train our students to respond to the emerging challenges of changing Amazonia. To date, the project facilitated two climate change workshops (Purús and Yurua) and has funded 21 Ucayali National University students to conduct interdisciplinary applied environmental research in Ucayali’s most remote, carbon-rich, and bioculturally diverse regions. Student research topics are enumerated below: Source. The Carnegie Institution for Science (2014). The High-Resolution Carbon Geography of Peru. A collaborative Report of the Carnegie Airborne Observatory and the Ministry of Environment of Peru. 1. Ethno-climatic knowledge of the Asháninka in the Purús Province 2. Characterization of Yaminahua Agricultural Production Systems: Doradillo, El Dorado and 20 de Mayo Indigenous communities, Yurua District 3. Climatic variability viewed through the perception of a Huni Kuin Indigenous community San Jose de Conta, Purús Province 4. Impact of climatic variability in the extraction of fishery resources in the Ashéninka Indigenous community of Dulce Gloria, Yurua District 5. Soil characterization in relation to land use change in a Huni Kuin Indigenous community: Balta, Purús Province 6. Evaluation of a pilot wildlife breeding center in an Ashéninka Indigenous community: Dulce Gloria, Yurua District 7. Socio-economic analysis of the 2014 economic development of six Indigenous communities in the Districts of Calleria and Iparia 8. Taricaya (Podocnemis unifilis) population density in the Yurua River, Yaminahua Indigenous community of El Dorado, Yurua District 9. Land use change and deforestation in an Asháninka Indigenous community: Pankirentsi, Purús Province 10. Identification of ecotourism potential in an Ashéninka Indigenous community: Dulce Gloria, Yurua District 11. Socio-economic impact of wild fauna use in the village of Breu, Yurua District 12. Socio-environmental impact analysis of the dirt road in Sharanahua and Huni Kuin Indigenous communities: San Jose de Conta and Bola de Oro, Purus Province 13. Traditional use of forestry species in Yaminahua and Ashéninka Indigenous communities: El Dorado and Nueva Victoria, Yurua District 14. The sustainability of extractive flora and fauna systems in an Amahuaca Indigenous community: Santa Rosa, Yurua District 15. Aquatic turtle, Charapa (Podocnemis expansa) and Taricaya (Podocnemis unifilis), populations and their use by an Ashéninka Indigenous community: Dulce Gloria, Yurua 16. The environmental impacts of mahogany (Swietenia macrophylla) extraction in permitted forestry areas of borderland Indigenous communities in the Yurua River Basin 17. Silviculture and natural regeneration of 5-year Meliacea plants in an Amahuaca Indigenous community: Santa Rosa, Yurua District 18. Gendered forestry use in an Ashéninka Indigenous community: Dulce Gloria, Yurua District 19. Use of pioneer species in secondary forests by a Huni Kuin indigenous community: Balta, Ucayali Region 20. The planned construction of the Puerto Esperanza to Iñapari road and the law of previous consultation process for indigenous communities in the Province of Purus 21. Frequency of Rinchosforum palmarum, Euprosperna elaeasa, Cyparissius daedalus y Plesobyrsa bicincta in the yarina, ungurahui and pona palm tree species in an Ashéninka Indigenous community: Dulce Gloria, Yurua District. Objective 1 Strengthen the capacities of UNU to provide high-quality undergraduate training in fields relevant to biodiversity conservation and resource management : (climate change, land tenure, deforestation and degradation, indigenous territories, gender) Integrate an applied interdisciplinary science-based undergraduate certificate program Objective 2 Strengthen capacity of UNU to conduct and disseminate applied research results Motivate faculty and student research through the creation of an UNU-based interdisciplinary environmental science journal and research network. Objective 3 Strengthen the ability of UNU to work collaboratively and across the region (indigenous communities) Expand applied, science-based UNU research theses in collaboration with Non Governmental Organizations (NGO) and governmental (GO) partners Objectives Conservation Science Framework UR RA Research Associate Capacity-Building Instruments: Applied interdisciplinary science-based undergraduate certificate program Conclusion 3 3. Forest, culture, and biodiversity rich Purus site. Peru THESES

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Page 1: Building Conservation Capacity through Higher Education in ...blog.richmond.edu/dsalisbury/files/2015/08/ChavezHanEtAl2015HED... · Climatic variability viewed through the perception

The Amazon rainforest plays a vital role in the maintenance of regional climate systems,biodiversity, the carbon cycle and the water cycle. Despite this, the Amazon rainforest is increasinglythreatened due to infrastructure expansion, in-migration and advance of the agricultural frontier, andextractive development. Amazonian universities are particularly important to reconciling conservationand development in the region given they train the future professionals and decision makers mostlikely to reside permanently in the Amazon. However, Amazonian faculty and students not only lackaccess to cutting edge scientific theories and tools, but also are increasingly urban, and thus removedfrom the forested landscapes and waterways most important for conserving biodiversity and mitigatingclimate change.

The Ucayali (National University of Ucayali - Peru) (UNU)- Richmond (University of Richmond - USA)(UR) partnership financed by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) throughthe American Council for Education’s (ACE) Higher Education for Development Program (HED), is oneof four international alliances for improving university education in Colombia, Ecuador and Peru underthe Initiative for the Andean Amazon Conservation II: Program for Higher Education. The programseeks to strengthen conservation science capacity through the improvement of applied research, studenttraining, and public sector engagement in biodiversity conservation. Our partnership initiative, “BuildingConservation Capacity in a Changing Amazonia,” uses innovative and interdisciplinary approaches toteach the sustainable use of tropical resources in the dynamic Southwestern Amazonia.

Conclusion

Building Conservation Capacity through Higher Education in the Peruvian AmazonAndrea B. Chavez¹ ², Stella Han³, Edgar Díaz Zúñiga², David Salisbury³, Roly Baldoceda Astete²,

¹Universidad Nacional de Ucayali, Pucallpa, Perú² Universidad Nacional Amazónica de Madre de Dios, Puerto Maldonado, Perú

³University of Richmond, VA, USA

A collaborative partnership in the Peruvian Amazon

NGOResearch

Mentorship

UNUProfessor

UNUThesis

Students

AppliedScience

ResearchDesign

Student provides skilled laborNGO provides opportunity and

mentorshipNGO research project expandsConservation network expands

Professor provides official mentorship

Student provides excellence for mentor

Science capacity grows

URRA adds scientific rigorNGO research project expandsConservation network expands

UNU professor and student engage in collaborative training

Science capacity grows

UNUcapacity and

learning networkexpands

NGOcapacityand

learningnetworkexpands

Participatory field methodsIncludes local / indigenous

territories

Increased regional conservation capacity by expanding NGO-GO science projects with applied UNU theses research

Thesis students have shown increased scientific and place-based knowledge along with increased conservation skills during the project implementation based on critical thinking, skills training, and experiential activities. Student field work has expanded interdisciplinary, applied environmental research in poorly understood remote areas with high biological and cultural diversity and has built trust with communities through extension activities. The project enhanced faculty-mentor relationships, improved pedagogy and teaching content in science and field methods, provided publication outlets, and integrated university, NGO, and GO personnel into a professional community of scholars.

Fig.2 Students applying critical thinking.

Fig.3 Students learning technical skills.

Fig.5 Students participating in experiential learning activities.

Fig.6 Applied field work in remote areas.

Fig.4 Students engage Indigenous in group discussions.

A c k n o w l e d g m e n t sMany thanks to Tessie Peña, Amanda Salazar, Tammy Hicks, Rita Riva, Nancy Propst, Jorge Rivas, Mary Finley-Brook, Rafael de Sa, Peter Smallwood, Javier del Águila, Francisco Estremadoyro, Jorge Miranda, Foster Brown, Sandra Ríos, Raúl Gutiérrez, Paulo Sima, Peter Cronkleton, Bruno Locatelli, Aoife Bennett-Curry, Anne Larson, Jose Saito, David Moreno, Grober Panduro, Aparicio Limachi,

Tedy Tuesta, Fernando Velásquez, David Moreno, Franz Tang, SERNANP, the Municipality of Yurua, ACONADYISH, the indigenous communities of Santa Rosa, El Dorado, Doradillo, Nueva Victoria, Dulce Gloria and people from Breu, San Mateo, Santa Rosita de Abujao, Caserio 24 de Septiembre.

1. UNU campusin one the most deforested areas of Peru2. Forest, culture, and biodiversity rich Yurua research site.

Pucallpa

21

2. YURUA

3. PURUS

University students train in Ucayali’s capital of Pucallpa to conduct project activities and research within the remote, bio- and culturally diverse Purús and Yurua watersheds of the Peruvian Amazon Basin. The Purús and Yurua contain more than 40 indigenous communities from 11 ethnic groups living in large expanses of biodiversity- and carbon-rich standing forest.Research integrates both university students and indigenous communities in participatory research to train current and future leaders to reflect critically on natural resource management as indispensable to our planet’s climate stability. Our project model broadens student skill sets (composed by theory, skills and practice) so they can analyze linked socio-ecological systems from an interdisciplinary, environmental science perspective and communicate to a range of stakeholders including policy makers, local communities, and the urban Amazon public. Education and research partners CIFOR, ProPurús, IBC, WoodsHole Research Center, and the Ucayali Government help train ourstudents to respond to the emerging challenges of changingAmazonia.To date, the project facilitated two climate change workshops (Purúsand Yurua) and has funded 21 Ucayali National University students to conduct interdisciplinary applied environmental research in Ucayali’s most remote, carbon-rich, and bioculturally diverse regions. Student research topics are enumerated below:

Source. The Carnegie Institution for Science (2014). The High-Resolution Carbon Geography of Peru. A collaborative Report of the Carnegie Airborne Observatory and the Ministry of Environment of Peru.

1. Ethno-climatic knowledge of the Asháninka in the Purús Province2. Characterization of Yaminahua Agricultural Production Systems: Doradillo, El Dorado and 20 de Mayo Indigenous communities, Yurua District3. Climatic variability viewed through the perception of a Huni Kuin Indigenous community San Jose de Conta, Purús Province4. Impact of climatic variability in the extraction of fishery resources in the Ashéninka Indigenous community of Dulce Gloria, Yurua District5. Soil characterization in relation to land use change in a Huni Kuin Indigenous community: Balta, Purús Province6. Evaluation of a pilot wildlife breeding center in an Ashéninka Indigenous community: Dulce Gloria, Yurua District7. Socio-economic analysis of the 2014 economic development of six Indigenous communities in the Districts of Calleria and Iparia8. Taricaya (Podocnemis unifilis) population density in the Yurua River, Yaminahua Indigenous community of El Dorado, Yurua District9. Land use change and deforestation in an Asháninka Indigenous community: Pankirentsi, Purús Province10. Identification of ecotourism potential in an Ashéninka Indigenous community: Dulce Gloria, Yurua District11. Socio-economic impact of wild fauna use in the village of Breu, Yurua District12. Socio-environmental impact analysis of the dirt road in Sharanahua and Huni Kuin Indigenous communities: San Jose de Conta and Bola de Oro, Purus Province13. Traditional use of forestry species in Yaminahua and Ashéninka Indigenous communities: El Dorado and Nueva Victoria, Yurua District14. The sustainability of extractive flora and fauna systems in an Amahuaca Indigenous community: Santa Rosa, Yurua District15. Aquatic turtle, Charapa (Podocnemis expansa) and Taricaya (Podocnemis unifilis), populations and their use by an Ashéninka Indigenous community: Dulce Gloria, Yurua16. The environmental impacts of mahogany (Swietenia macrophylla) extraction in permitted forestry areas of borderland Indigenous communities in the Yurua River Basin17. Silviculture and natural regeneration of 5-year Meliacea plants in an Amahuaca Indigenous community: Santa Rosa, Yurua District 18. Gendered forestry use in an Ashéninka Indigenous community: Dulce Gloria, Yurua District19. Use of pioneer species in secondary forests by a Huni Kuin indigenous community: Balta, Ucayali Region20. The planned construction of the Puerto Esperanza to Iñapari road and the law of previous consultation process for indigenous communities in the Province of Purus21. Frequency of Rinchosforum palmarum, Euprosperna elaeasa, Cyparissius daedalus y Plesobyrsa bicincta in the yarina, ungurahui and pona palm tree species in an AshéninkaIndigenous community: Dulce Gloria, Yurua District.

Objective 1Strengthen the capacities of UNU to provide high-quality undergraduate training in fields relevant to biodiversity conservation and resource management : (climate change, land tenure, deforestation and degradation, indigenous territories, gender)

Integrate an applied interdisciplinary science-based undergraduate certificate programObjective 2Strengthen capacity of UNU to conduct and disseminate applied research results

Motivate faculty and student research through the creation of an UNU-based interdisciplinary environmental science journal and research network.

Objective 3Strengthen the ability of UNU to work collaboratively and across the region (indigenous communities)

Expand applied, science-based UNU research theses in collaboration with Non Governmental Organizations (NGO) and governmental (GO) partners

Objectives

Conservation Science Framework

UR RA ResearchAssociate

Capacity-Building Instruments: Applied interdisciplinary science-based undergraduate certificate program

Conclusion

3

3. Forest, culture, and biodiversity rich Purus site.

Peru

THESES