Des indicateurs spatialisés des transhumances pastorales au Ferlo

Transhumance in the Sahel has been described and mapped extensively because it represents an essential pillar for securing pastoral systems. However, very few quantifiable indicators exist to guide decision makers and policy makers for taking transhumance into account. Through a case study in the Se...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Grégoire Leclerc, Oumar Sy
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Unité Mixte de Recherche 8504 Géographie-cités 2011-05-01
Series:Cybergeo
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/cybergeo/23661
id doaj-383c50eec3704dbea9153f2bb3220ed8
record_format Article
spelling doaj-383c50eec3704dbea9153f2bb3220ed82020-11-24T21:46:48ZdeuUnité Mixte de Recherche 8504 Géographie-citésCybergeo1278-33662011-05-0110.4000/cybergeo.23661Des indicateurs spatialisés des transhumances pastorales au FerloGrégoire LeclercOumar SyTranshumance in the Sahel has been described and mapped extensively because it represents an essential pillar for securing pastoral systems. However, very few quantifiable indicators exist to guide decision makers and policy makers for taking transhumance into account. Through a case study in the Senegalese Ferlo we propose novel indicators (spatial and not) to analyze and monitor pastoral territories as defined by the long transhumance of Ferlo’s pastoralists. We propose two indicators, computed from recorded itineraries followed by pastoralists and herds, which show the intensity of transhumance in space and time (transhumant.day.km-2), during the journey and at destination. Crossing these indicators with rainfall data indicate that transhumance is more structural and strategic than opportunistic, while somehow climate-dependent with partial correlation with total yearly rainfall. Through origin-destination matrices that summarize fluxes between departure areas (“home zones”) and destination zones (“foster zones”), we build two other indicators that are aggregated at administrative levels, i.e. the emissivity index which shows the fraction of herders that initiate transhumance from a given residency zone, and the attractivity index which shows the fraction of herders that end-up in a given foster zone. A complementary indicator shows the connectedness of these zones through transhumance, and therefore is useful for highlighting the set of zones where coordination of pastoral policies would be desirable. All these indicators based on pastoral mobility also help grasp dimensions of local interactions (such as access to resources and opportunities for trade) and regional interactions (territorial supply and demand).http://journals.openedition.org/cybergeo/23661FerloindicatormobilitypastoralismSaheltranshumance
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Grégoire Leclerc
Oumar Sy
spellingShingle Grégoire Leclerc
Oumar Sy
Des indicateurs spatialisés des transhumances pastorales au Ferlo
Cybergeo
Ferlo
indicator
mobility
pastoralism
Sahel
transhumance
author_facet Grégoire Leclerc
Oumar Sy
author_sort Grégoire Leclerc
title Des indicateurs spatialisés des transhumances pastorales au Ferlo
title_short Des indicateurs spatialisés des transhumances pastorales au Ferlo
title_full Des indicateurs spatialisés des transhumances pastorales au Ferlo
title_fullStr Des indicateurs spatialisés des transhumances pastorales au Ferlo
title_full_unstemmed Des indicateurs spatialisés des transhumances pastorales au Ferlo
title_sort des indicateurs spatialisés des transhumances pastorales au ferlo
publisher Unité Mixte de Recherche 8504 Géographie-cités
series Cybergeo
issn 1278-3366
publishDate 2011-05-01
description Transhumance in the Sahel has been described and mapped extensively because it represents an essential pillar for securing pastoral systems. However, very few quantifiable indicators exist to guide decision makers and policy makers for taking transhumance into account. Through a case study in the Senegalese Ferlo we propose novel indicators (spatial and not) to analyze and monitor pastoral territories as defined by the long transhumance of Ferlo’s pastoralists. We propose two indicators, computed from recorded itineraries followed by pastoralists and herds, which show the intensity of transhumance in space and time (transhumant.day.km-2), during the journey and at destination. Crossing these indicators with rainfall data indicate that transhumance is more structural and strategic than opportunistic, while somehow climate-dependent with partial correlation with total yearly rainfall. Through origin-destination matrices that summarize fluxes between departure areas (“home zones”) and destination zones (“foster zones”), we build two other indicators that are aggregated at administrative levels, i.e. the emissivity index which shows the fraction of herders that initiate transhumance from a given residency zone, and the attractivity index which shows the fraction of herders that end-up in a given foster zone. A complementary indicator shows the connectedness of these zones through transhumance, and therefore is useful for highlighting the set of zones where coordination of pastoral policies would be desirable. All these indicators based on pastoral mobility also help grasp dimensions of local interactions (such as access to resources and opportunities for trade) and regional interactions (territorial supply and demand).
topic Ferlo
indicator
mobility
pastoralism
Sahel
transhumance
url http://journals.openedition.org/cybergeo/23661
work_keys_str_mv AT gregoireleclerc desindicateursspatialisesdestranshumancespastoralesauferlo
AT oumarsy desindicateursspatialisesdestranshumancespastoralesauferlo
_version_ 1725899935784632320