Smallholder farmer’s perceived effects of climate change on crop production and household livelihoods in rural Limpopo province, South Africa.
Date
2017-04-26Author
Ubisi, Nomcebo,R.
Mafongoya, Paramu, L.
Kolanisi, Unathi
Jiri, Obert
Type
ArticleMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
This study investigated the perceived effects
of climate change on crop production and household
livelihoods of smallholder farmers in Mopani and Vhembe
district, South Africa. Data was collected through a
questionnaire administered to 150 smallholder farmers.
The questionnaires were complemented by 8 focus
group discussions and secondary data. Multinomial
logit regression model was used to analyse the factors
influencing smallholder farmers’ choice of climate change
adaptation strategies. The study findings revealed that
subsistence farmers perceived prolonged droughts (56.4%)
as the main shock stressing crop production. Droughts
often lead to low crop yield and high crop failure (73.3%).
In response to the prevailing climatic conditions different
gender adopted different strategies, 41% of female
farmers adapted by changing planting dates, while male
farmers employed crop variety and diversification (35%)
and mixed cropping (15%). The smallholder farmers were
vulnerable with limited adaptive capacity to withstand
climate change due to compromised social, human,
physical, natural and financial assets. The results showed
that smallholder farmers tend to adapt better when they
have access to extension officers (P<0.01). Therefore,
it is important for the government to strengthen the
relationship between smallholder farmers and