Farmers' perceptions of climate change and adaptation strategies in South Africa's Western Cape

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Farmers' perceptions of climate change and adaptation strategies in South Africa's Western Cape. / Talanow, Katharina; Topp, Emmeline; Loos, Jacqueline et al.
in: Journal of Rural Studies, Jahrgang 81, 01.01.2021, S. 203-219.

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschungbegutachtet

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@article{6221d06c417e425b8281dc06ec735250,
title = "Farmers' perceptions of climate change and adaptation strategies in South Africa's Western Cape",
abstract = "Climate change poses a serious threat to South Africa's agricultural sector. Implementing adaptation strategies is thus crucial to secure future agricultural production and rural livelihoods. To support effective adaptation, it is necessary to understand how farmers, as primary land-use decision-makers, perceive and respond to climate change. We conducted semi-structured interviews to examine climate change adaptation behaviour by commercial grain and wine grape farmers in a water-scarce, recently drought-stricken agricultural region of South Africa's Western Cape. Specifically, we investigated (1) how farmers perceive climate change, (2) which factors influence their adaptive behaviour and (3) which adaptation strategies they apply in their farming practices, and whether these are medium to long-term or short-term coping strategies. Through the resulting discourses, we found that most farmers have observed long-term regional changes in climate, such as changes in rainfall patterns, increasing temperatures and extreme climatic events. Farmers' adaptive behaviour is influenced by previous experience of climatic stresses and internal factors, including risk perception, perceived adaptive capacity and cognitive biases. Institutional and biophysical constraints including perceived lack of government support and soil composition are external barriers to adaptation. Most farmers have implemented adaptive strategies on their farms, including alterations to soil and crop management, such as changes of harvest and planting time, crop rotations and water conservation techniques. However, farmers have planned fewer adaptive strategies to future impacts of climate change than current implemented strategies. Current strategies are mostly technological and address direct impacts of climate stressors, although climate change impacts go beyond the farm scale into society. These findings may have important implications for future policy making and climate change adaptation in this region, given the place-specific institutional and biophysical barriers identified by farmers, and the strategic importance of the Western Cape in South African agriculture.",
keywords = "Sustainability Science, Adaptive behaviour, Cape Floristic Region, Drought, Risk perception, South Africa, adaptive behaviour, Cape Floristic Region, Drought, Risk perception, South africa",
author = "Katharina Talanow and Emmeline Topp and Jacqueline Loos and Berta Mart{\'i}n-L{\'o}pez",
note = "Funding Information: This study is funded by the German Research Foundation (grant number DFG, LO 2323/1–1 .). Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2020 Elsevier Ltd",
year = "2021",
month = jan,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1016/j.jrurstud.2020.10.026",
language = "English",
volume = "81",
pages = "203--219",
journal = "Journal of Rural Studies",
issn = "0743-0167",
publisher = "Elsevier Ltd",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Farmers' perceptions of climate change and adaptation strategies in South Africa's Western Cape

AU - Talanow, Katharina

AU - Topp, Emmeline

AU - Loos, Jacqueline

AU - Martín-López, Berta

N1 - Funding Information: This study is funded by the German Research Foundation (grant number DFG, LO 2323/1–1 .). Publisher Copyright: © 2020 Elsevier Ltd

PY - 2021/1/1

Y1 - 2021/1/1

N2 - Climate change poses a serious threat to South Africa's agricultural sector. Implementing adaptation strategies is thus crucial to secure future agricultural production and rural livelihoods. To support effective adaptation, it is necessary to understand how farmers, as primary land-use decision-makers, perceive and respond to climate change. We conducted semi-structured interviews to examine climate change adaptation behaviour by commercial grain and wine grape farmers in a water-scarce, recently drought-stricken agricultural region of South Africa's Western Cape. Specifically, we investigated (1) how farmers perceive climate change, (2) which factors influence their adaptive behaviour and (3) which adaptation strategies they apply in their farming practices, and whether these are medium to long-term or short-term coping strategies. Through the resulting discourses, we found that most farmers have observed long-term regional changes in climate, such as changes in rainfall patterns, increasing temperatures and extreme climatic events. Farmers' adaptive behaviour is influenced by previous experience of climatic stresses and internal factors, including risk perception, perceived adaptive capacity and cognitive biases. Institutional and biophysical constraints including perceived lack of government support and soil composition are external barriers to adaptation. Most farmers have implemented adaptive strategies on their farms, including alterations to soil and crop management, such as changes of harvest and planting time, crop rotations and water conservation techniques. However, farmers have planned fewer adaptive strategies to future impacts of climate change than current implemented strategies. Current strategies are mostly technological and address direct impacts of climate stressors, although climate change impacts go beyond the farm scale into society. These findings may have important implications for future policy making and climate change adaptation in this region, given the place-specific institutional and biophysical barriers identified by farmers, and the strategic importance of the Western Cape in South African agriculture.

AB - Climate change poses a serious threat to South Africa's agricultural sector. Implementing adaptation strategies is thus crucial to secure future agricultural production and rural livelihoods. To support effective adaptation, it is necessary to understand how farmers, as primary land-use decision-makers, perceive and respond to climate change. We conducted semi-structured interviews to examine climate change adaptation behaviour by commercial grain and wine grape farmers in a water-scarce, recently drought-stricken agricultural region of South Africa's Western Cape. Specifically, we investigated (1) how farmers perceive climate change, (2) which factors influence their adaptive behaviour and (3) which adaptation strategies they apply in their farming practices, and whether these are medium to long-term or short-term coping strategies. Through the resulting discourses, we found that most farmers have observed long-term regional changes in climate, such as changes in rainfall patterns, increasing temperatures and extreme climatic events. Farmers' adaptive behaviour is influenced by previous experience of climatic stresses and internal factors, including risk perception, perceived adaptive capacity and cognitive biases. Institutional and biophysical constraints including perceived lack of government support and soil composition are external barriers to adaptation. Most farmers have implemented adaptive strategies on their farms, including alterations to soil and crop management, such as changes of harvest and planting time, crop rotations and water conservation techniques. However, farmers have planned fewer adaptive strategies to future impacts of climate change than current implemented strategies. Current strategies are mostly technological and address direct impacts of climate stressors, although climate change impacts go beyond the farm scale into society. These findings may have important implications for future policy making and climate change adaptation in this region, given the place-specific institutional and biophysical barriers identified by farmers, and the strategic importance of the Western Cape in South African agriculture.

KW - Sustainability Science

KW - Adaptive behaviour

KW - Cape Floristic Region

KW - Drought

KW - Risk perception

KW - South Africa

KW - adaptive behaviour

KW - Cape Floristic Region

KW - Drought

KW - Risk perception

KW - South africa

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85096376658&partnerID=8YFLogxK

UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/ed6efae1-78df-38d4-9a51-285bc955b9b6/

U2 - 10.1016/j.jrurstud.2020.10.026

DO - 10.1016/j.jrurstud.2020.10.026

M3 - Journal articles

VL - 81

SP - 203

EP - 219

JO - Journal of Rural Studies

JF - Journal of Rural Studies

SN - 0743-0167

ER -

DOI