CLIMATE CHANGE, VARIABILITY AND SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURE IN ZIMBABWE'S RURAL COMMUNITIES

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...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gukurume Simbarashe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Russian Journal of Agricultural and Socio-Economic Sciences 2013-02-01
Series:Russian Journal of Agricultural and Socio-Economic Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.rjoas.com/issue-2013-02/i014_article_2013_10.pdf
id doaj-43951989eb2841879692da8c8f6b724b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-43951989eb2841879692da8c8f6b724b2020-11-25T00:56:36ZengRussian Journal of Agricultural and Socio-Economic SciencesRussian Journal of Agricultural and Socio-Economic Sciences2226-11842013-02-0114289100CLIMATE CHANGE, VARIABILITY AND SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURE IN ZIMBABWE'S RURAL COMMUNITIESGukurume SimbarasheThis 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.http://www.rjoas.com/issue-2013-02/i014_article_2013_10.pdfClimate changeClimate variabilityFood insecurityLivelihood shocksAdaptationDrought-resistant crops
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gukurume Simbarashe
spellingShingle Gukurume Simbarashe
CLIMATE CHANGE, VARIABILITY AND SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURE IN ZIMBABWE'S RURAL COMMUNITIES
Russian Journal of Agricultural and Socio-Economic Sciences
Climate change
Climate variability
Food insecurity
Livelihood shocks
Adaptation
Drought-resistant crops
author_facet Gukurume Simbarashe
author_sort Gukurume Simbarashe
title CLIMATE CHANGE, VARIABILITY AND SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURE IN ZIMBABWE'S RURAL COMMUNITIES
title_short CLIMATE CHANGE, VARIABILITY AND SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURE IN ZIMBABWE'S RURAL COMMUNITIES
title_full CLIMATE CHANGE, VARIABILITY AND SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURE IN ZIMBABWE'S RURAL COMMUNITIES
title_fullStr CLIMATE CHANGE, VARIABILITY AND SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURE IN ZIMBABWE'S RURAL COMMUNITIES
title_full_unstemmed CLIMATE CHANGE, VARIABILITY AND SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURE IN ZIMBABWE'S RURAL COMMUNITIES
title_sort climate change, variability and sustainable agriculture in zimbabwe's rural communities
publisher Russian Journal of Agricultural and Socio-Economic Sciences
series Russian Journal of Agricultural and Socio-Economic Sciences
issn 2226-1184
publishDate 2013-02-01
description 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.
topic Climate change
Climate variability
Food insecurity
Livelihood shocks
Adaptation
Drought-resistant crops
url http://www.rjoas.com/issue-2013-02/i014_article_2013_10.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT gukurumesimbarashe climatechangevariabilityandsustainableagricultureinzimbabwesruralcommunities
_version_ 1725226374642270208