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Farmer forecasts: Impacts of seasonal rainfall expectations on agricultural decision-making in Sub-Saharan Africa

Farmer forecasts: Impacts of seasonal rainfall expectations on agricultural decision-making in Sub-Saharan Africa
Farmer forecasts: Impacts of seasonal rainfall expectations on agricultural decision-making in Sub-Saharan Africa

Seasonal climate variability frequently undermines farm yields, reduces food availability, and lowers income. This is particularly evident among small-scale agricultural producers in both irrigated and non-irrigated agroecosystems in the Global South where maize cultivars constitute a critical component of food production. In these systems, farmers make climate-sensitive decisions that include the selection of late- and/or early-maturing seed varieties, the diversity of seed varieties sown, and when to plant. Farmers’ expectations of future rainfall would therefore seem to be critical determinants of agricultural outcomes and foreshadow climate impacts. However, few studies have quantified the linkages between on-farm decisions and farmer seasonal predictions. We report on detailed household and phone surveys of 501 smallholder farmers in central Kenya based on the 2018 growing seasons and expectations for the 2019 March-April-May growing season. We show that farmers’ expectations of the upcoming seasonal rainfall have important associations with selections of seed maturity varieties and the number of maturing varieties farmers expect to plant and less important associations with the seeds’ planting dates. Furthermore, we show that 79% of the farmers form an expectation of the future seasonal climate and about two-thirds of them formed expectations based on a heuristic that connects the past climate to future seasonal conditions. More problematically, one-third of the farmers formed their rainfall expectation based on the prior season, and we show that no such correlation exists in observational data nor is correlation of seasonal rainfall supported by current understanding of climate variability. These results highlight the challenges farmers face in anticipating seasonal rainfall, which has implications for crop diversification and choices to adopt drought tolerant cultivars. The results suggest that farmers’ expectations of upcoming seasonal climate are important measures of farm decision-making.

Agricultural decision-making, Climate information services, Climate perceptions, Maize, Seasonal climate forecasts, Smallholder
2212-0963
Guido, Zack
cd8ba452-c323-4e9c-8c73-143722d23642
Zimmer, Andrew
63964638-cbe9-4887-b9a5-0fe57ba13a85
Lopus, Sara
fa8ff023-4b87-4369-8ec7-676576434b53
Hannah, Corrie
6f6a906d-0df4-4f50-8e2e-99b00e168d66
Gower, Drew
c19c5d70-e138-43c6-88b7-df54ba7bef78
Waldman, Kurt
f930a7ad-e738-4748-89b9-1249be38c8dc
Krell, Natasha
d92af6dc-2931-43f5-b79c-0fa610c3dc76
Sheffield, Justin
dd66575b-a4dc-4190-ad95-df2d6aaaaa6b
Caylor, Kelly
9495817c-5392-47ed-a013-1d02f501aa28
Evans, Tom
a8c4d73b-075c-485a-bdec-4018b7315e06
Guido, Zack
cd8ba452-c323-4e9c-8c73-143722d23642
Zimmer, Andrew
63964638-cbe9-4887-b9a5-0fe57ba13a85
Lopus, Sara
fa8ff023-4b87-4369-8ec7-676576434b53
Hannah, Corrie
6f6a906d-0df4-4f50-8e2e-99b00e168d66
Gower, Drew
c19c5d70-e138-43c6-88b7-df54ba7bef78
Waldman, Kurt
f930a7ad-e738-4748-89b9-1249be38c8dc
Krell, Natasha
d92af6dc-2931-43f5-b79c-0fa610c3dc76
Sheffield, Justin
dd66575b-a4dc-4190-ad95-df2d6aaaaa6b
Caylor, Kelly
9495817c-5392-47ed-a013-1d02f501aa28
Evans, Tom
a8c4d73b-075c-485a-bdec-4018b7315e06

Guido, Zack, Zimmer, Andrew, Lopus, Sara, Hannah, Corrie, Gower, Drew, Waldman, Kurt, Krell, Natasha, Sheffield, Justin, Caylor, Kelly and Evans, Tom (2020) Farmer forecasts: Impacts of seasonal rainfall expectations on agricultural decision-making in Sub-Saharan Africa. Climate Risk Management, 30, [100247]. (doi:10.1016/j.crm.2020.100247).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Seasonal climate variability frequently undermines farm yields, reduces food availability, and lowers income. This is particularly evident among small-scale agricultural producers in both irrigated and non-irrigated agroecosystems in the Global South where maize cultivars constitute a critical component of food production. In these systems, farmers make climate-sensitive decisions that include the selection of late- and/or early-maturing seed varieties, the diversity of seed varieties sown, and when to plant. Farmers’ expectations of future rainfall would therefore seem to be critical determinants of agricultural outcomes and foreshadow climate impacts. However, few studies have quantified the linkages between on-farm decisions and farmer seasonal predictions. We report on detailed household and phone surveys of 501 smallholder farmers in central Kenya based on the 2018 growing seasons and expectations for the 2019 March-April-May growing season. We show that farmers’ expectations of the upcoming seasonal rainfall have important associations with selections of seed maturity varieties and the number of maturing varieties farmers expect to plant and less important associations with the seeds’ planting dates. Furthermore, we show that 79% of the farmers form an expectation of the future seasonal climate and about two-thirds of them formed expectations based on a heuristic that connects the past climate to future seasonal conditions. More problematically, one-third of the farmers formed their rainfall expectation based on the prior season, and we show that no such correlation exists in observational data nor is correlation of seasonal rainfall supported by current understanding of climate variability. These results highlight the challenges farmers face in anticipating seasonal rainfall, which has implications for crop diversification and choices to adopt drought tolerant cultivars. The results suggest that farmers’ expectations of upcoming seasonal climate are important measures of farm decision-making.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 9 October 2020
Additional Information: Funding Information: We are indebted to the many farmers who shared their ideas and time, often in lieu of tending their farms. We especially thank John Gitonga and Boniface Kimathi from the Mpala Research Centre in Nanyuki, Kenya for research coordination and feedback on analysis. This research was funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation , grant number SES-1360463 . Publisher Copyright: © 2020 The Authors
Keywords: Agricultural decision-making, Climate information services, Climate perceptions, Maize, Seasonal climate forecasts, Smallholder

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 472238
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/472238
ISSN: 2212-0963
PURE UUID: e0e1a96c-e63c-4b10-9287-e3a24a183d1d
ORCID for Justin Sheffield: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2400-0630

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 30 Nov 2022 17:32
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 03:33

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Contributors

Author: Zack Guido
Author: Andrew Zimmer
Author: Sara Lopus
Author: Corrie Hannah
Author: Drew Gower
Author: Kurt Waldman
Author: Natasha Krell
Author: Kelly Caylor
Author: Tom Evans

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