Mobile Pastoralists know how to Coexist with Wildlife (Day 13)
Guardian herding dogs are a mobile pastoralist’s best friend. The Bacak family think that this young pup, that they have been training to protect the herd against wolf attacks, is a promising one. Living with carnivores on a daily basis have enabled mobile pastoralists to uncover methods for coexisting. Rather than taking reactive measures after incidents occur, they give emphasis to preventing attacks with adequate techniques. The traditional use of livestock guarding dogs in Turkey such as Kangal (AKA Anatolian shepherd dog) and Akbaş breeds is a good example. Specific traditional ecological knowledge regarding how to train a guardian dog, how to manage them, which breed is efficient in which condition / environment, the behavioral differences between breeds and so on, is an important source of information that can contribute actions against this conflict with context-specific and empirically-grounded recommendations.
Fragmentation or habitat loss threaten both mobile pastoralists and nature. These are also the main drivers of the decrease in the abundance of wild preys for carnivores, which may lead them to increase their foraging ranges and predation on livelihoods. These conflicts needs to be addressed in overall nature conservation policies, taking their root causes into account – such as the recovery of wild ungulate populations. It’s also crucial to generate solutions at local level that incorporate both concerns for human safety and livelihoods, and nature conservation.
Read our stories from partners and practitioners.
Read our stories from partners and practitioners.
Migration is a School for Mobile Pastoralist Children (Day 8)
The spring migration taking place between April & June, and the fall migration taking place between September & October, coincides with school calendar and mobile pastoralists find themselves forced to leave their children with settled relatives or in dormitories....
Mobile Pastoralism has Direct Benefits for Water Cycle Regulation (Day 7)
One of the most interesting features of migration routes is the fountains - cisterns that were built by mobile pastoralists over thousands of years for both themselves and their livestock to access water. Today the majority of the fountains, cisterns with no...
Mobile Pastoralism Protects the Soil (Day 6)
Day 6 sees the herd and pastoralists cover 47km as they climb up to an altitude of 1227 meters. The seasonal mobility of animals means they leave the pastures just in time to allow vegetation to recover. Livestock grazing is an effective tool for soil stability,...
Mobile Pastoralism has an Indespendible Role against Wildfires (Day 5)
On the fourth day of the migration the herd moved 24km along corridors that were created by the movement of their ancestors through forests for thousands of years. Today the Bacak family of Sarıkeçili nomadic pastoralists decide not to move in order to rest their...
Mobile Pastoralism and Nature (Day 4)
Mobile pastoralism has persisted over the centuries thanks to its harmonious existence with nature. Relying on a constant interaction and interdependency with the nature has led practitioners to cultivate a rich body of traditional ecological knowledge, which in turn...
Mobile Pastoralism is the most Efficient Livestock Farming System (Day 3)
3 days into the migration and the herd has moved 22km - from and altitude of 230 meters to one of 790 meters. As they climb, both the herd's and the Bacak family's moods improve. Mobile pastoralism is the most efficient and sustainable livestock farming system in...
Mobile Pastoralism and Natural Cultural Heritage (Day 2)
On the second day of the spring migration the Sarıkeçili nomadic pastoralists are moving up towards the Taurus Mountains. In Turkey, mobile pastoralism is a major traditional practice which has shaped the country’s outstanding landscapes where three of the world’s...
On the Move with Sarıkeçili Nomads – Day 1
Yolda Initiative is on the move for the Spring Migration. Follow them during this long spring to see how mobile pastoralists in Turkey live in harmony with nature by migrating between summering and wintering sites according to seasonal availability - as they have been...