Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

Engaging People with Carbon and Climate Change Using Landscape Scale Conservation and Biodiversity Monitoring

Moolna, Adam; Knott, Cheryl; Wallis, Daveen; Crawshaw, David; Brierley-Moore, Joanne; Simons, Julia; Selby, Anne

Authors

Cheryl Knott

Daveen Wallis

David Crawshaw

Joanne Brierley-Moore

Julia Simons

Anne Selby



Abstract

Climate change due to anthropogenic increases in atmospheric carbon dioxide is a global phenomenon with a recognised high public profile. The impacts of climate change, however, are mostly felt at a local level. Communicating climate change relevance where people live and where they can make a difference has proven a greater challenge. The Lancashire Wildlife Trust is engaging people, politicians and businesses with the local causes and impacts of climate change through collaborative working across the 100 km2 Carbon Landscape between Manchester and Liverpool. Past coal and peat extraction created the scarred landscapes today undergoing a renaissance as ecologically-rich wetlands. In the face of changing climate, a resilient ecosystem here is vital to ensure that carbon dioxide stays locked up in the remaining peat and restoration offers future sequestration possibilities. The Biodiverse Society Project engages people with wildlife recording and sensitises them to the impacts of climate change. Boosting the biological recording community increases the data available to planners and politicians for effective evidence-based management of landscape scale biodiversity. Reviewing these two projects identifies how engaging communities with landscape scale conservation approaches and including climate change messaging both bolsters local climate action and helps build the wider societal support needed.

Online Publication Date Dec 30, 2017
Publication Date 2018
Deposit Date Jun 12, 2023
Pages 293-308
Series Title Climate Change Management
Series ISSN 1610-2002
Edition 1
Book Title Handbook of Climate Change Communication: Vol. 1
Chapter Number 16
ISBN 9783319698373; 9783319698380
DOI https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-69838-0_16