Results/Conclusions
This talk will discuss the relationship between traditional Marsh Arab management of the Mesopotamian marshlands, and the diversity and resiliency of the al ahwar ecosystem. The ethnographic interviews provide a human perspective on the al Ahwar marshes, and give voice and credibility to Iraqi cultural memories and a sense of place. This unique approach to integrating cultural resiliency and ecosystem functions will provide new perspectives on marsh rehabilitation, and the ability to propose future steps for the rehabilitation process. Intermediate scale disturbances created by Traditional Resource Management by the Marsh Arabs were integral to ecosystem structure and function. In highly evolved cultural ecosystems, humans are the keystone species. The al ahwar marshes are globally significant, partially due to the >5,000 year history of cultural knowledge and management of the marshes, and the legendary Marsh Arab lifestyle integral to the marshes. The ecotone between wetlands, rivers and distributary channels provided culturally important semi-cultivated marsh species (Phragmites australis) as well as agricultural production. Understanding the Traditional Ecological Knowledge of the Marsh Dwellers, and including this knowledge in marsh restoration, will support conservation biology, ecological restoration and sustainable development.