Agricultural water management and livelihoods in the crop-livestock systems of the Volta Basin

With mixed crop–livestock systems projected to be the principal source of food in developing countries in the coming decades, opportunities exist for smallholders to participate and benefit from emerging crop and livestock markets in the Volta Basin. Given the economic, social and environmental vuln...

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Autores principales: Douxchamps, Sabine, Ayantunde, Augustine A., Panyan, E.K., Ouattara, K., Kabore, A., Karbo, N., Sawadogo, B.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/51622
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author Douxchamps, Sabine
Ayantunde, Augustine A.
Panyan, E.K.
Ouattara, K.
Kabore, A.
Karbo, N.
Sawadogo, B.
author_browse Ayantunde, Augustine A.
Douxchamps, Sabine
Kabore, A.
Karbo, N.
Ouattara, K.
Panyan, E.K.
Sawadogo, B.
author_facet Douxchamps, Sabine
Ayantunde, Augustine A.
Panyan, E.K.
Ouattara, K.
Kabore, A.
Karbo, N.
Sawadogo, B.
author_sort Douxchamps, Sabine
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description With mixed crop–livestock systems projected to be the principal source of food in developing countries in the coming decades, opportunities exist for smallholders to participate and benefit from emerging crop and livestock markets in the Volta Basin. Given the economic, social and environmental vulnerability due to high water scarcity and variability in the basin, improvements in agricultural water management (AWM) are needed to ensure sustainable benefits. A survey was conducted among 326 crop–livestock households in four water scarce sites of the basin in Burkina Faso and Ghana to characterize households in terms of access to water, services and information, AWM intensity and livelihoods, and to explore the linkages between these characteristics. The sources of water were more diverse for study sites in Ghana than in Burkina, allowing different types of AWM strategies. Most of the farmers perceived a strong positive impact of AWM strategies on their livelihoods. Almost 70% of the variation in livelihood assets was explained by variation in AWM intensity, affecting mainly food consumption, sources of income and housing index. With increasing access to water, services and information, AWM intensity significantly increased, as well as labour for water-related activities and food consumption. This increase in AWM was significantly related to an increase in livelihood assets (R2 = 52%). Policies should be developed to improve access to information and services as well as access to market in rural areas of the Volta Basin, to enhance positive impact of AWM strategies on livelihoods of the rural households.
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spelling CGSpace516222024-05-01T08:18:10Z Agricultural water management and livelihoods in the crop-livestock systems of the Volta Basin Douxchamps, Sabine Ayantunde, Augustine A. Panyan, E.K. Ouattara, K. Kabore, A. Karbo, N. Sawadogo, B. water mixed farming With mixed crop–livestock systems projected to be the principal source of food in developing countries in the coming decades, opportunities exist for smallholders to participate and benefit from emerging crop and livestock markets in the Volta Basin. Given the economic, social and environmental vulnerability due to high water scarcity and variability in the basin, improvements in agricultural water management (AWM) are needed to ensure sustainable benefits. A survey was conducted among 326 crop–livestock households in four water scarce sites of the basin in Burkina Faso and Ghana to characterize households in terms of access to water, services and information, AWM intensity and livelihoods, and to explore the linkages between these characteristics. The sources of water were more diverse for study sites in Ghana than in Burkina, allowing different types of AWM strategies. Most of the farmers perceived a strong positive impact of AWM strategies on their livelihoods. Almost 70% of the variation in livelihood assets was explained by variation in AWM intensity, affecting mainly food consumption, sources of income and housing index. With increasing access to water, services and information, AWM intensity significantly increased, as well as labour for water-related activities and food consumption. This increase in AWM was significantly related to an increase in livelihood assets (R2 = 52%). Policies should be developed to improve access to information and services as well as access to market in rural areas of the Volta Basin, to enhance positive impact of AWM strategies on livelihoods of the rural households. 2015-11 2014-11-24T08:26:33Z 2014-11-24T08:26:33Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/51622 en Open Access Elsevier Douxchamps, S., Ayantunde, A., Panyan, E. K., Ouattara, K., Kabore, A., Karbo, N. and Sawadogo, B. 2015. Agricultural water management and livelihoods in the crop-livestock systems of the Volta Basin. Water Resources and rural Development 6: 92-104
spellingShingle water
mixed farming
Douxchamps, Sabine
Ayantunde, Augustine A.
Panyan, E.K.
Ouattara, K.
Kabore, A.
Karbo, N.
Sawadogo, B.
Agricultural water management and livelihoods in the crop-livestock systems of the Volta Basin
title Agricultural water management and livelihoods in the crop-livestock systems of the Volta Basin
title_full Agricultural water management and livelihoods in the crop-livestock systems of the Volta Basin
title_fullStr Agricultural water management and livelihoods in the crop-livestock systems of the Volta Basin
title_full_unstemmed Agricultural water management and livelihoods in the crop-livestock systems of the Volta Basin
title_short Agricultural water management and livelihoods in the crop-livestock systems of the Volta Basin
title_sort agricultural water management and livelihoods in the crop livestock systems of the volta basin
topic water
mixed farming
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/51622
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