Comparing smallholder farmers’ perception of climate change with meteorological data: A case study from southwestern Nigeria

This paper examines smallholder farmers’ perceptions of climate change, climate variability and their impacts, and adaptation strategies adopted over the past three decades. We use ethnographic analysis, combined with Cumulative Departure Index (CDI), Rainfall Anomaly Index (RAI) analysis, and corre...

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Main Authors: Ayansina Ayanlade, Maren Radeny, John F. Morton
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2017-03-01
Series:Weather and Climate Extremes
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2212094716300755
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spelling doaj-0769d78227de455fbb04153b17e7f4e82020-11-24T21:55:30ZengElsevierWeather and Climate Extremes2212-09472017-03-0115C243310.1016/j.wace.2016.12.001Comparing smallholder farmers’ perception of climate change with meteorological data: A case study from southwestern NigeriaAyansina Ayanlade0Maren Radeny1John F. Morton2Department of Geography, Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, NigeriaCGIAR Research Programme on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS), International Livestock Research Institute, Nairobi, KenyaNatural Resources Institute, University of Greenwich, Kent, United KingdomThis paper examines smallholder farmers’ perceptions of climate change, climate variability and their impacts, and adaptation strategies adopted over the past three decades. We use ethnographic analysis, combined with Cumulative Departure Index (CDI), Rainfall Anomaly Index (RAI) analysis, and correlation analysis to compare farmers’ perceptions in Southwestern Nigeria with historical meteorological data, in order to assess the way farmers’ observations mirror the climatic trends. The results show that about 67% of farmers who participated had observed recent changes in climate. Perceptions of rural farmers on climate change and variability are consistent with the climatic trend analysis. RAI and CDI results illustrate that not less than 11 out of 30 years in each study site experienced lower-than-normal rainfall. Climatic trends show fluctuations in both early growing season (EGS) and late growing season (LGS) rainfall and the 5-year moving average suggests a reduction in rainfall over the 30 years. Climatic trends confirmed farmers’ perceptions that EGS and LGS precipitations are oscillating, that rainfall onset is becoming later, and EGS rainfall is reducing. Overall impacts of climate change on both crops and livestock appear to be highly negative, much more on maize (62.8%), yam (52.2%), poultry (67%) and cattle (63.2%). Years of farming experiences and level of income of farmers appear to have a significant relationship with farmers’ choice of adaptation strategies, with r≥0.60@ p<0.05 and r≥0.520@ p<0.05 respectively. The study concluded that farmers’ perceptions of climate change mirror meteorological analysis, though their perceptions were based on local climate parameters. Smallholder farmers are particularly vulnerable to climate change since the majority of them do not have enough resources to cope.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2212094716300755Climate changeSmallholder farmersPerception analysisNigeria
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ayansina Ayanlade
Maren Radeny
John F. Morton
spellingShingle Ayansina Ayanlade
Maren Radeny
John F. Morton
Comparing smallholder farmers’ perception of climate change with meteorological data: A case study from southwestern Nigeria
Weather and Climate Extremes
Climate change
Smallholder farmers
Perception analysis
Nigeria
author_facet Ayansina Ayanlade
Maren Radeny
John F. Morton
author_sort Ayansina Ayanlade
title Comparing smallholder farmers’ perception of climate change with meteorological data: A case study from southwestern Nigeria
title_short Comparing smallholder farmers’ perception of climate change with meteorological data: A case study from southwestern Nigeria
title_full Comparing smallholder farmers’ perception of climate change with meteorological data: A case study from southwestern Nigeria
title_fullStr Comparing smallholder farmers’ perception of climate change with meteorological data: A case study from southwestern Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Comparing smallholder farmers’ perception of climate change with meteorological data: A case study from southwestern Nigeria
title_sort comparing smallholder farmers’ perception of climate change with meteorological data: a case study from southwestern nigeria
publisher Elsevier
series Weather and Climate Extremes
issn 2212-0947
publishDate 2017-03-01
description This paper examines smallholder farmers’ perceptions of climate change, climate variability and their impacts, and adaptation strategies adopted over the past three decades. We use ethnographic analysis, combined with Cumulative Departure Index (CDI), Rainfall Anomaly Index (RAI) analysis, and correlation analysis to compare farmers’ perceptions in Southwestern Nigeria with historical meteorological data, in order to assess the way farmers’ observations mirror the climatic trends. The results show that about 67% of farmers who participated had observed recent changes in climate. Perceptions of rural farmers on climate change and variability are consistent with the climatic trend analysis. RAI and CDI results illustrate that not less than 11 out of 30 years in each study site experienced lower-than-normal rainfall. Climatic trends show fluctuations in both early growing season (EGS) and late growing season (LGS) rainfall and the 5-year moving average suggests a reduction in rainfall over the 30 years. Climatic trends confirmed farmers’ perceptions that EGS and LGS precipitations are oscillating, that rainfall onset is becoming later, and EGS rainfall is reducing. Overall impacts of climate change on both crops and livestock appear to be highly negative, much more on maize (62.8%), yam (52.2%), poultry (67%) and cattle (63.2%). Years of farming experiences and level of income of farmers appear to have a significant relationship with farmers’ choice of adaptation strategies, with r≥0.60@ p<0.05 and r≥0.520@ p<0.05 respectively. The study concluded that farmers’ perceptions of climate change mirror meteorological analysis, though their perceptions were based on local climate parameters. Smallholder farmers are particularly vulnerable to climate change since the majority of them do not have enough resources to cope.
topic Climate change
Smallholder farmers
Perception analysis
Nigeria
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2212094716300755
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