西非采用气候智能型农业做法的益处和障碍:系统回顾

Thomas Peprah Agyekum, Philip Antwi-Agyei, Andrew J. Dougill, Lindsay C. Stringer
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引用次数: 0

摘要

气候智能型农业(CSA)是同时解决粮食安全、气候变化和农业生产力问题的可靠机制。尽管整个西非广泛采用了 CSA 方法,但许多国家仍无法解决粮食不安全和农村贫困问题。本系统性综述按照《系统性综述和元分析首选报告项目》声明核对表,对已发表的证据进行了评估,内容涉及 CSA 实践的类型、采用的决定因素和益处,以及在西非采用 CSA 实践所面临的障碍。从 ScienceDirect、Web of Science 和 Scopus 数据库中检索了 2010 年 1 月至 2023 年 3 月间发表的英文文章,这些文章调查了在西非采用 CSA 方法的益处和障碍。采用乔安娜-布里格斯研究所(Joanna Briggs Institute)用于系统综述的批判性评估工具对研究的方法学质量进行了评估。提取了文章中出现的主题,并对每个主题进行了总结说明。在应用了资格标准后,有 12 篇文章被纳入最终综述。所审查的研究表明,与天气和能源智能型实践相比,农民使用了更多的知识、水、碳和氮智能型实践。在所审查的论文中,农民的教育水平、年龄、性别、家庭规模、社会团体成员、农业推广服务以及获得信贷/金融资源的机会等因素都会影响 CSA 的采用。经审查的研究发现,采用 CSA 实践的农民报告的益处包括土壤肥力提高、产量增加、家庭收入增加、气候适应能力增强(如克服干旱和极端温度的影响)以及粮食安全。一些农民采用了 CSA 实践,以减少干旱和高温对作物的影响,从而提高对气候多变性和气候变化的适应能力。然而,农民在采用这些做法时也遇到了一些挑战,如某些 CSA 做法的技术性、实施 CSA 的劳动力成本高、缺乏信贷和政府支持、获取天气和气候信息的途径有限、有关 CSA 选择的信息有限、小农文盲率高以及某些做法与农民感兴趣的作物不相容等。我们的研究结果表明,在我们审查的研究中,大多数 CSA 实践并没有很好地针对农民感兴趣的作物,政府应提供更多实用培训,以提高农民对 CSA 实践的理解,尤其是那些与天气和能源智能举措相关的实践。此外,还应提供更有力的财政和制度支持,以便在各个层面更好地采纳和使用 CSA 实践。此外,价值观、习俗和信仰等社会文化因素也应适当纳入 CSA 计划,因为它们会影响 CSA 实践的采用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Benefits and barriers to the adoption of climate-smart agriculture practices in West Africa: A systematic review

Benefits and barriers to the adoption of climate-smart agriculture practices in West Africa: A systematic review

Climate-smart agriculture (CSA) serves as a credible mechanism to simultaneously address food security, climate change, and agricultural productivity. Despite the widespread adoption of CSA approaches across West Africa, many countries have still not been able to resolve the problems of food insecurity and rural poverty. This systematic review evaluates published evidence on the types of CSA practices, the determinants and benefits of adoption, and the barriers confronting the adoption of CSA practices across West Africa, following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses statement checklist. Articles published in English from January 2010 to March 2023 investigating the benefits of and barriers to the adoption of CSA practices in West Africa were retrieved from ScienceDirect, Web of Science, and Scopus databases. The methodological quality of studies was assessed using Joanna Briggs Institute critical appraisal tools for use in systematic reviews. The themes emerging from the articles were extracted, and a summary was provided to illustrate each theme. After applying the eligibility criteria, 12 articles were included in the final review. The studies reviewed revealed that farmers used more knowledge-, water-, carbon-, and nitrogen-smart practices, compared to weather- and energy-smart practices. Across the reviewed papers, factors such as the education level of farmers, age, gender, household size, membership of a social group, agricultural extension services, and access to credit/financial resources influenced CSA adoption. The reviewed studies identified that farmers who used CSA practices reported benefits such as improved soil fertility, higher yield, improved household income, climate resilience (such as overcoming the effects of drought and extreme temperatures), and food security. Some farmers adopted CSA practices to reduce the effect of droughts and high temperatures on their crops, and thus increase their resilience to climate variability and change. However, farmers’ adoption is confronted with challenges related to the technicality of some CSA practices, high cost of labor for CSA implementation, lack of credit and government support, limited access to weather and climate information, limited information about CSA options, high illiteracy level of smallholder farmers, and incompatibility of some practices with farmers’ crop of interest. Our findings show that most CSA practices in the studies we reviewed are not well targeted to meet farmers’ crop of interest, and that governments should provide more practical training to enhance farmers’ understanding of CSA practices, especially those related to weather- and energy-smart initiatives. There should also be more robust financial and institutional support to improve the adoption and usage of CSA practices at all levels. Additionally, socio-cultural factors such as values, customs, and beliefs should be properly integrated into CSA plans as they influence the adoption of CSA practices.

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