Climate Change Impacts Can Be Differentially Perceived Across Time Scales: A Study Among the Tuareg of the Algerian Sahara
M. D. Miara,
M. Negadi,
S. Tabak,
H. Bendif,
W. Dahmani,
M. Ait Hammou,
T. Sahnoun,
J. Snorek,
V. Porcher,
V. Reyes‐García,
I. Teixidor‐Toneu
Affiliations
M. D. Miara
Department and Faculty of Nature and Life Sciences Laboratory of Agro‐Biotechnology and Nutrition in Semi‐arid Areas Ibn Khaldoun University of Tiaret Tiaret Algeria
M. Negadi
Department and Faculty of Nature and Life Sciences Laboratory of Agro‐Biotechnology and Nutrition in Semi‐arid Areas Ibn Khaldoun University of Tiaret Tiaret Algeria
S. Tabak
Department and Faculty of Nature and Life Sciences Laboratory of Agro‐Biotechnology and Nutrition in Semi‐arid Areas Ibn Khaldoun University of Tiaret Tiaret Algeria
H. Bendif
Department of Natural and Life Sciences Faculty of Sciences University of M'sila M'sila Algeria
W. Dahmani
Department and Faculty of Nature and Life Sciences Laboratory of Agro‐Biotechnology and Nutrition in Semi‐arid Areas Ibn Khaldoun University of Tiaret Tiaret Algeria
M. Ait Hammou
Department and Faculty of Nature and Life Sciences Laboratory of Agro‐Biotechnology and Nutrition in Semi‐arid Areas Ibn Khaldoun University of Tiaret Tiaret Algeria
T. Sahnoun
House of Agriculture of the Wilaya of Illizi Illizi Algeria
J. Snorek
Department of Environmental Studies Dartmouth College Hanover NH USA
V. Porcher
Insitut de Ciència i Tecnologia Ambientals Univeristat Autònoma de Barcelona Bellaterra Spain
V. Reyes‐García
Insitut de Ciència i Tecnologia Ambientals Univeristat Autònoma de Barcelona Bellaterra Spain
I. Teixidor‐Toneu
Natural History Museum University of Oslo Oslo Norway
Abstract As an Indigenous community of Algeria and the broader Sahel, the Tuareg hold unique ecological knowledge, which might contribute to broader models of place‐based climate change impacts. Between January and April 2019, we carried out semi‐structured interviews (N = 23) and focus group discussions (N = 3) in five villages of the province of Illizi, Algeria, to document the local Tuareg community's timeline and ecological calendar, both of which are instruments used to understand place‐based reports of climate change impacts. The livelihoods of the Tuareg of Illizi are finely tuned to climate variability as reflected in changes reported in the cadence of events in their ecological calendar (marked by cyclical climatic and religious events). Participants reported rain and temperature irregularities and severe drought events, which have impacted their pastoral and semi‐pastoral livelihoods. These reports are aligned with scientifically measured climate observations and predictions. Paradoxically, although participants recall with detail the climatic disasters that happened in the region over the last century, the Tuareg do not explicitly report decadal trends in the frequency of extreme events. The differential perception of climate change impacts across scales can have important implications for undertaking climate change adaptation measures.