Adapting to Climate Change Mosaically: An Analysis of African Livestock Management by Agro-Ecological Zones
Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
- Seo, S. Niggol (Author)
- Mendelsohn, Robert (Author)
- Dinar, Ariel (Author)
- Kurukulasuriya, Pradeep (Author)
Title
Adapting to Climate Change Mosaically: An Analysis of African Livestock Management by Agro-Ecological Zones
Abstract
Abstract This paper examines African livestock management across Agro-Ecological Zones (AEZs) to learn how they would adapt to climate change in the coming century. We analyze farm level decisions to own livestock and to choose a primary livestock species using logit models with and without country fixed effects or AEZ fixed effects. With a hot dry scenario, the results indicate that livestock ownership will increase slightly across all of Africa, but especially in West Africa and high elevation AEZs. Dairy cattle will decrease in semi-arid regions, sheep will increase in lowlands, and rearing chickens will increase at high elevations. On the other hand, if climate becomes wetter, livestock ownership will fall dramatically in lowlands and high elevation moist AEZs. Beef cattle will increase and sheep will fall in dry AEZs, dairy cattle will fall precipitously and goats will rise in moist AEZs, and chickens will increase at high elevations but fall at mid elevations. Therefore, adaptation measures should be tailored to a specific AEZ.
Publication
B E Journal of Economic Analysis & Policy
Volume
9
Issue
2
Pages
-
Date
2009-03-30
ISSN
1935-1682
Call Number
openalex: W2135202551
Extra
openalex: W2135202551
mag: 2135202551
Citation
Seo, S. N., Mendelsohn, R., Dinar, A., & Kurukulasuriya, P. (2009). Adapting to Climate Change Mosaically: An Analysis of African Livestock Management by Agro-Ecological Zones. B E Journal of Economic Analysis & Policy, 9(2). https://doi.org/10.2202/1935-1682.1955
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