Abstract

Many people in African countries derive their livelihoods from agriculture. Therefore, unfavourable environmental and climatic conditions render them more vulnerable to increasing food insecurity and poverty rates. However, few studies have investigated how farmers’ adaptation strategies affect farm productivity and household food security in the Sahelian region, notably Mali. We analyse factors that influence adaptation strategies to climate change and the impacts of the adaptation strategies on maize productivity and household food security in southern Mali. Farmers use adaptation strategies such as organic fertilizers, changing planting dates and growing of short duration maize varieties to mitigate against the negative effects of climate change. We find that farmer experience, number of livestock owned, off-farm employment, access to credit, farmer association and technical training exert positive effects on the use of planting short-duration maize varieties as an adaptation strategy, while distance to the farm shows a negative effect. We observe that household size, experience in maize farming, number of livestock owned and technical training positively influence farmers to change planting dates as an adaptation strategy. The use of organic fertilizers and short-duration maize varieties promote maize productivity and food security. We conclude that building farmers’ adaptive capacity tends to reduce their vulnerability to climate change by increasing crop yields and food security.

Highlights

  • Climate change is a great threat to the achievement of the Sustainability Development Goals (SDGs) of zero hunger and no poverty in sub-Saharan Africa, especially Mali (Krishnamurthy et al, 2012)

  • We address the following research questions: RQ1: What are the factors that influence the use of adaptation strategies to climate change by maize farmers in southern Mali? RQ2: What are the impacts of the adaptation strategies on maize yield and food security of smallholder farm households?

  • The dominant forms of adaptation strategies the farmers used to mitigate against climate change in southern Mali included the use of organic fertilizers, change of planting dates and planting of short duration crop varieties

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Summary

Introduction

Climate change is a great threat to the achievement of the Sustainability Development Goals (SDGs) of zero hunger and no poverty in sub-Saharan Africa, especially Mali (Krishnamurthy et al, 2012). Ten percent of children aged 6 to 59 months suffer from acute malnutrition, whereas 20% of the Malian population is food insecure (WFP 2019). Since 1975, temperatures have increased by more than 0.8 °C across most parts of Mali, with typical rates of warming greater than 0.2 °C per decade (Funk et al 2012). The rising temperatures and declining rainfall patterns are detrimental to crop yields, especially maize, which requires more water. This leads to reduced food supply as well as overall availability of food (Krishnamurthy et al 2012)

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