TY - JOUR
T1 - Environmental heterogeneity and commodity sharing in smallholder agroecosystems
AU - Giroux, Stacey A.
AU - McCord, Paul
AU - Lopus, Sara
AU - Gower, Drew
AU - Dell'Angelo, Jampel
AU - Dickinson, Stephanie
AU - Chen, Xiwei
AU - Caylor, Kelly K.
AU - Evans, Tom P.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Giroux et al.
PY - 2020/1/1
Y1 - 2020/1/1
N2 - Smallholder farmers undertake a number of strategies to cope with climate shocks in a community. The sharing of resources across households constitutes one coping mechanism when environmental shocks differentially impact households. This paper investigates commodity sharing dynamics among households in eight communities in an environmentally heterogeneous highland-lowland area in central Kenya. We use survey data and meteorological data to test whether commodity sharing, measured at the household level by net inflow of commodities, varies across a regional precipitation gradient, and we reveal how sharing fluctuates with rainfall over the course of a year. We find both precipitation and income to be significant predictors of households' net value of shared commodities. Specifically, farmers who live in drier areas with less income are more likely to receive more commodities than they give. We also find that the length of time a household has been established in the area is significantly related to commodity sharing. Further, commodity sharing follows the pattern of harvest and food storage over the course of the year, with households giving the most commodities at times when food storage levels are higher, that is, post-harvest. The study sheds light on the relationship between commodity sharing as a coping mechanism and environmental heterogeneity in a region prone to seasonal food insecurity.
AB - Smallholder farmers undertake a number of strategies to cope with climate shocks in a community. The sharing of resources across households constitutes one coping mechanism when environmental shocks differentially impact households. This paper investigates commodity sharing dynamics among households in eight communities in an environmentally heterogeneous highland-lowland area in central Kenya. We use survey data and meteorological data to test whether commodity sharing, measured at the household level by net inflow of commodities, varies across a regional precipitation gradient, and we reveal how sharing fluctuates with rainfall over the course of a year. We find both precipitation and income to be significant predictors of households' net value of shared commodities. Specifically, farmers who live in drier areas with less income are more likely to receive more commodities than they give. We also find that the length of time a household has been established in the area is significantly related to commodity sharing. Further, commodity sharing follows the pattern of harvest and food storage over the course of the year, with households giving the most commodities at times when food storage levels are higher, that is, post-harvest. The study sheds light on the relationship between commodity sharing as a coping mechanism and environmental heterogeneity in a region prone to seasonal food insecurity.
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U2 - 10.1371/journal.pone.0228021
DO - 10.1371/journal.pone.0228021
M3 - Article
C2 - 31995584
AN - SCOPUS:85078690968
SN - 1932-6203
VL - 15
JO - PloS one
JF - PloS one
IS - 1
M1 - e0228021
ER -