Perceived livelihood impacts and adaptation of vegetable farmers to climate variability and change in selected sites fro
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Perceived livelihood impacts and adaptation of vegetable farmers to climate variability and change in selected sites from Ghana, Uganda and Nigeria Olushola Fadairo1 · Portia Adade Williams2 · Faridah Sendagire Nalwanga3 Received: 15 April 2019 / Accepted: 5 November 2019 © The Author(s) 2019
Abstract In the wake of deepened situations of changing climate, a clear understanding of the perceived impacts and adaptation of climate variability and change on livelihoods of vegetable farmers in Western and Eastern Africa, which is not readily available, is critical for sustainable vegetable production in Africa. Development planning for climate change vulnerability and adaptation assessment was utilised in the study. Using multi-stage sampling procedure, 193 vegetable farmers in selected sites prominent for vegetable production from Uganda, Ghana and Nigeria were used. Data were analysed using descriptive statistics, analysis of variance and linear regression at α0.05. Awareness of climate variability and change was high among most respondents from the three countries, but highest among respondents from Uganda (78.3%). Awareness was highest for long dry spell ( x̄ = 1.90) and drought ( x̄ = 1.81) and lowest for harmful gas emissions ( x̄ = 0.76). Changes in climate variability and trends were perceived to be highest in terms of flood volume/damage caused by flood to farmlands in Nigeria ( x̄ = 3.85) and Uganda ( x̄ = 5.0), but in terms of increased temperature for Ghana ( x̄ = 4.93). Impact of climate-related changes on vegetable farming was high in Ghana (98.3%) and Nigeria (46.6%) but low in Uganda (5.0%). Awareness (β = 0.14), perception (β = 0.15) use of adaptation strategies (β = 0.10) and household size (β = − 0.19) predicted change in perceived impact of climate variability among vegetable farmers. Vegetable farmers in Nigeria, Ghana and Uganda are affected differently by climate variability. Farmers in these countries also have different priorities for adaptation strategies. Locality-specific climate adaptation strategies would help ease farmers burden due to climate change. Keywords Climate variability · Vegetable farming · Adaptation · Livelihood impacts · Nigeria · Ghana · Uganda
* Portia Adade Williams [email protected] Extended author information available on the last page of the article
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1 Introduction Vegetables are an essential source of human nutrition and now globally recognised for nutritional security giving its richness in micronutrient contents and improved awareness on healthy eating among people in recent times. Its cultivation provides opportunity of improved income to farmers as global vegetable production has increased exponentially in the last 250 years and the world trade values of vegetables now surpass that of cereals (Bhardwaj 2012). Also, horticultural crops including vegetables are associated with more income and higher labour per hectarage of land cultivated than staple crops in smallholder farms (Williams et al. 2017a). This
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