Looking for the present in the past: Social-Ecological Memory and Palaeoecology to explore changes in Ciénaga Grande de Santa Marta-Colombia

University essay from Stockholms universitet/Stockholm Resilience Centre

Abstract: Mangrove forests are unique coastal ecosystems, formed through a complex network of terrestrial, estuarine, and marine processes that have provided a diverse assortment of societal benefits across time. Compounding anthropogenic pressures are driving critical mangrove degradation worldwide, threatening the wellbeing of coastal populations historically associated with these systems. The Ciénaga Grande de Santa Marta (CGSM) in northern Colombia is the largest coastal lagoon-delta in the Caribbean. It is inhabited by stilt-house communities who have developed an intricate livelihood and cultural relationship with the mangroves. The CGSM has experienced sustained social and ecological degradation over the last 6 decades, triggered by land-use change and disruption of hydrological connections. This study integrates Social-Ecological Memory and Palaeoecology to develop a historical contextualization of the biophysical and social dimensions of environmental change in CGSM. Integration of geochemical sediment analysis, C14 radiocarbon dating, and demographic inferences from archaeological evidence revealed three distinct periods over the last 5000 years. During this time sea level rise and hydroclimatic variability shaped the transition from freshwater to prevailing marine conditions, and modulated human occupation patterns in the area around 2000 years ago. In addition, participatory reconstructions with local communities offered nuanced descriptions about the spatial, temporal and contextual aspects of the degradation process, with profound social-ecological consequences. The interdisciplinary approach of this study indicates that CGSM is a highly dynamic social-ecological system that has been changing and reconfiguring across different time scales in response to both natural and human-induced processes, and contributes to the preservation of collective memory in this unique stilt-house community. Finally, it reveals the relative effects of biophysical and social drivers on driving social-ecological change under both millennial and decadal scales.

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