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The structures underpinning vulnerability: examining landscape-society interactions in a smallholder coffee agroforestry system

Smallholder farmers dependent on rain-fed agriculture are particularly vulnerable to extreme climate events and, therefore, it is necessary to identify adaptive measures that would increase farmer resilience to these shocks. The management options in a low-input system, like forest coffee (Coffea ar...

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Published in:Environmental research letters 2019-07, Vol.14 (7), p.75006
Main Authors: Morel, Alexandra C, Hirons, Mark, Demissie, Sheleme, Gonfa, Techane, Mehrabi, Zia, Long, Peter R, Rifai, Sami, Woldemariam Gole, Tadesse, Mason, John, McDermott, Constance L, Boyd, Emily, Robinson, Elizabeth J Z, Malhi, Yadvinder, Norris, Ken
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c575t-58f4a45ef4de51599388892cb14b9eb4e891d1b0330d79a34f2ef17c7ff78afa3
cites cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c575t-58f4a45ef4de51599388892cb14b9eb4e891d1b0330d79a34f2ef17c7ff78afa3
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creator Morel, Alexandra C
Hirons, Mark
Demissie, Sheleme
Gonfa, Techane
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Mason, John
McDermott, Constance L
Boyd, Emily
Robinson, Elizabeth J Z
Malhi, Yadvinder
Norris, Ken
description Smallholder farmers dependent on rain-fed agriculture are particularly vulnerable to extreme climate events and, therefore, it is necessary to identify adaptive measures that would increase farmer resilience to these shocks. The management options in a low-input system, like forest coffee (Coffea arabica), are limited and there are several factors out of farmers' control driving their vulnerability to changing climatic conditions. These can relate to social structures and landscape factors, which can interact to reduce farmers' adaptive capacity, creating a state of contextual vulnerability. We explored the potential synergies of this interaction across elevation, patch area and shade management gradients for smallholder coffee farms around the UNESCO Yayu Coffee Forest Biosphere Reserve in Ethiopia before, during and immediately following the 2015/16 El Niño. We documented a dramatic collapse in coffee yields across all farms, resulting in coffee incomes 29.5% 18.0% and 19.5% 10.0% of 2014 incomes in 2015 and 2016, respectively. We identified farms at elevations between 1500 and 1600 m with canopy openness between 40% and 45% as being consistently low yielding over our study period. We found these farmers had the highest rates of income diversification and, therefore, were already exhibiting adaptive capacity. Farmers with the largest income losses were spatially concentrated between 1600 and 1700 m, located in larger patch areas with lower canopy openness. Farmers at this elevation have access to poor infrastructure, restrictions on shade management and reported higher dependence on income from coffee, indicating an interaction of biotic and social factors exacerbating their vulnerability. Unfortunately, due to a nationally declared state of emergency, we were unable to survey farmers on the adaptive measures they undertook; therefore, we are limited in assessing their resilience. However, we do show the importance of considering both biotically and socially-mediated influences for assessing smallholder vulnerability, particularly barriers to diversifying incomes.
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subjects Agriculture
Agroforestry
Biosphere
Canopies
Climate change
Climatic conditions
Coffee
coffee forest
Economic Geography
Ekonomisk geografi
El Nino
Ethiopia
Farmers
Farms
Income
Landscape
Resilience
Samhällsvetenskap
Shade
Small farms
smallholder
Social and Economic Geography
Social factors
Social och ekonomisk geografi
Social Sciences
vulnerability
title The structures underpinning vulnerability: examining landscape-society interactions in a smallholder coffee agroforestry system
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