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Linking agricultural adaptation strategies, food security and vulnerability: evidence from West Africa

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  • Sabine Douxchamps
  • Mark T. Van Wijk
  • Silvia Silvestri
  • Abdoulaye S. Moussa
  • Carlos Quiros
  • Ndeye Yacine B. Ndour
  • Saaka Buah
  • Leopold Some
  • Mario Herrero
  • Patricia Kristjanson
  • Mathieu Ouedraogo
  • Philip K. Thornton
  • Piet Van Asten
  • Robert Zougmore
  • Mariana C. Rufino
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<mark>Journal publication date</mark>06/2016
<mark>Journal</mark>Regional Environmental Change
Issue number5
Volume16
Number of pages13
Pages (from-to)1305-1317
Publication StatusPublished
Early online date1/09/15
<mark>Original language</mark>English

Abstract

Adaptation strategies to reduce smallholder farmers' vulnerability to climate variability and seasonality are needed given the frequency of extreme weather events predicted to increase during the next decades in sub-Saharan Africa, particularly in West Africa. We explored the linkages between selected agricultural adaptation strategies (crop diversity, soil and water conservation, trees on farm, small ruminants, improved crop varieties, fertilizers), food security, farm household characteristics and farm productivity in three contrasting agro-ecological sites in West Africa (Burkina Faso, Ghana and Senegal). Differences in land area per capita and land productivity largely explained the variation in food security across sites. Based on land size and market orientation, four household types were distinguished (subsistence, diversified, extensive, intensified), with contrasting levels of food security and agricultural adaptation strategies. Income increased steadily with land size, and both income and land productivity increased with degree of market orientation. The adoption of agricultural adaptation strategies was widespread, although the intensity of practice varied across household types. Adaptation strategies improve the food security status of some households, but not all. Some strategies had a significant positive impact on land productivity, while others reduced vulnerability resulting in a more stable cash flow throughout the year. Our results show that for different household types, different adaptation strategies may be 'climate-smart'. The typology developed in this study gives a good entry point to analyse which practices should be targeted to which type of smallholder farmers, and quantifies the effect of adaptation options on household food security. Subsequently, it will be crucial to empower farmers to access, test and modify these adaptation options, if they were to achieve higher levels of food security.