Abstract

This article explores the impact of climate change and variability on agricultural productivity in the communal area of Bikita. The article further examines the adaptation and mitigation strategies devised by farmers to deal with the vagaries of climate change and variability. The sustainability of these is also interrogated in this article. This study juxtaposed qualitative and quantitative methodologies albeit with more bias on the former. A total of 40 farmers were sampled for unstructured interviews and focus group discussions. This article argues that the adverse impacts of climate change and variability are felt heavily by the poor communal farmers who are directly dependent on agriculture for livelihood. From the study, some of the widely reported signs of climate variability in Bikita included late and unpredictable rains, high temperatures (heat waves), successive drought, shortening rainfall seasons and seasonal changes in the timing of rainfall. The paper argues that climate change has compounded the vulnerability of peasant farmers in the drought prone district of Bikita plunging them into food insecurity and abject poverty. It emerged in the study that some of effects of climate variability felt by communal farmers in Bikita included failure of crops, death of livestock and low crop yields, all of which have led to declining agricultural productivity. Findings in this study however established that communal farmers have not been passive victims of the vagaries of climate change and variability. They have rationally responded to it through various adaptation and mitigation strategies both individually and collectively.

Highlights

  • This paper focuses on the impact of climate change and climate variability on the agricultural activities of the peasant farmers in Bikita

  • Manyatsi etal (2010) argued that climate change refers to the long-term significant change in the “average weather” that a given region experiences, while climate variability refers to variation in the mean state and other statistics of climate on all temporal and spatial scales beyond that of individual weather events (Bates etal in IPCC, 2007).Several scholars have noted that the impact of climate change has been extremely over – exaggerated, while others loathe on the whole idea of climate change as a rhetorical fad.for the purpose of this paper, climate change is defined as a process of global warming, in part attributable to the ‘greenhouse gases’ generated by human activity

  • While a greater number of the communal farmers expressed ignorance about the threats posed by climate change and variability, most of them acknowledged drastic changes occurring in their areas that have had negative ramifications on agricultural productivity

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Summary

Introduction

Manyatsi etal (2010) argued that climate change refers to the long-term significant change in the “average weather” that a given region experiences, while climate variability refers to variation in the mean state and other statistics of climate on all temporal and spatial scales beyond that of individual weather events (Bates etal in IPCC, 2007).Several scholars have noted that the impact of climate change has been extremely over – exaggerated, while others loathe on the whole idea of climate change as a rhetorical fad.for the purpose of this paper, climate change is defined as a process of global warming, in part attributable to the ‘greenhouse gases’ generated by human activity It is the fundamental objective of this study to examine the impact of climate change wether real or perceived on agricultural sustainability as well as to explore the various responses at both community and individual level to the threats posed by climate change and variability. Agriculture is extremely critical in sub – Saharan Africa in terms of subsistence, contribution to the GDP (about 35 percent), employment (70 – 80 –per cent of total labourforce) and foreign exchange earnings (about 30 percent) (Abalu & Hassan ;1998).What is more is that in Bikita agriculture is the main source of livelihood and by extension food security

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