Indigenous Climate Information and Modern Meteorological Records in Sinazongwe District, Southern Province, Zambia

Japan Agricultural Research Quarterly
ISSN 00213551
NII recode ID (NCID) AA0068709X
Full text
47-02-08.pdf436.25 KB

In 2007, we conducted field research in Sinazongwe District in Southern Province, Zambia, focusing on collecting indigenous information concerning the local climate, which was often embodied in proverbs involving weather forecasts. The indigenous information was compared with recently collected meteorological records and a relationship between popular folk knowledge, local climate, and global climate factors such as ENSO (El Niño and the Southern Oscillation) was suggested. Proverbs related to agriculture and climate were categorized into four types of indicators used to forecast rain: the emergence of butterflies; tree characteristics (producing shoots, flowering, and dropping water); wind direction, wind speed, and temperature; and wind sound. The first two types are based on seasonal changes in life forms, and the latter two use wind variations produced by synoptic pattern changes.

Date of issued
Creator KANNO Hiromitsu SAKURAI Takeshi SHINJO Hitoshi MIYAZAKI Hidetoshi ISHIMOTO Yudai SAEKI Tazu UMETSU Chieko SOKOTELA Sesele CHIBOOLA Milimo
Subject

agriculture in Zambia

indigenous proverbs

meteorological observation

resilience

weather forecasting

Publisher Japan International Research Center for Agricultural Sciences
Available Online
NII resource type vocabulary Journal Article
Volume 47
Issue 2
spage 191
epage 201
DOI 10.6090/jarq.47.191
Rights Japan International Research Center for Agricultural Sciences
Language eng

Related Publication