Replication Data for: Fish farmers’ perceptions, impacts and adaptation on/of/to climate change in Africa (The case of Egypt and Nigeria) (doi:10.7910/DVN/W0K9BF)

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Document Description

Citation

Title:

Replication Data for: Fish farmers’ perceptions, impacts and adaptation on/of/to climate change in Africa (The case of Egypt and Nigeria)

Identification Number:

doi:10.7910/DVN/W0K9BF

Distributor:

Harvard Dataverse

Date of Distribution:

2019-07-30

Version:

4

Bibliographic Citation:

Adeleke, M. Lydia; Al-Kenawy, Diaa Abdel Raheem; Nasr-Allah, Ahmed; Murphy, Seamus; El-Naggar, Gamal Othman; Dickson, Malcolm William, 2019, "Replication Data for: Fish farmers’ perceptions, impacts and adaptation on/of/to climate change in Africa (The case of Egypt and Nigeria)", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/W0K9BF, Harvard Dataverse, V4

Study Description

Citation

Title:

Replication Data for: Fish farmers’ perceptions, impacts and adaptation on/of/to climate change in Africa (The case of Egypt and Nigeria)

Identification Number:

doi:10.7910/DVN/W0K9BF

Authoring Entity:

Adeleke, M. Lydia (Department of Fisheries and Aquaculture Technology, The Federal University of Technology, Akure, Nigeria)

Al-Kenawy, Diaa Abdel Raheem (WorldFish)

Nasr-Allah, Ahmed (WorldFish)

Murphy, Seamus (WorldFish)

El-Naggar, Gamal Othman (WorldFish)

Dickson, Malcolm William (WorldFish)

Other identifications and acknowledgements:

Department of Fisheries and Aquaculture Technology, The Federal University of Technology, Akure, Nigeria

Other identifications and acknowledgements:

WorldFish

Producer:

Department of Fisheries and Aquaculture Technology

Distributor:

Harvard Dataverse

Distributor:

WorldFish

Access Authority:

Adeleke, M. Lydia

Depositor:

WorldFISH RDM Team

Date of Deposit:

2019-07-28

Holdings Information:

https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/W0K9BF

Study Scope

Keywords:

Social Sciences, Climate change

Abstract:

Perception is the bed rock to really apprehend the assertiveness and interpretations of the farmers which are the grass root receptors or benefactors of the effects of climate change. Individual perception and knowledge on climate change varies according to geographical location, occupation, political and socio-economics, ecological, cultural background of the entity. Empirical observations and climate models both indicate that global climate and ocean conditions have been changing over the last 100 years and will likely change more rapidly in the future. Fish production and supply in Africa could not meet up with the demand of the consumers as a result of financial constraints, low capital investment, high cost of fish stocking and feeding, dry season, pollution and climate change. This research therefore, assesses the fish farmers’ perceptions, impacts and adaptation on/of/to climate change in Africa, using Egypt and Nigeria as archetypal examples. It also annotates the precautionary measures taken by the fish farmers to ameliorate the negative impacts of climate change in the continent. KoboCollect method was used to design relevant questions and analyzed the fish farmers’ responses. The results revealed that climate change has both positive and negative impacts on African aquaculture and it is believe that aquaculture is a way of adapting to the adverse effect of climate change on fisheries. 93% of the fish farmers in Africa have the ideal of climate change, 64% believe that the change will linger and persevere in the next 10–20 years. In Nigeria, 61% of the respondents relied on stream and river while in Egypt, 99% of the fish farmers cultured their fish on earthen ponds and depend on the use of agricultural drainage water. Fish production could not meet up with the demand of the consumers in Nigeria as a result of pending constraints unlike Egypt which has achieved the scale of aquaculture expansion compare to other African countries. It is therefore, expedient that efforts should be geared towards regional and continental integration in order to encourage aquaculture practices in other part of Africa and climate change investment should be encouraged.

Country:

Egypt, Nigeria

Geographic Unit(s):

Longitude 31.199075 Latitude 31.085539, Longitude 8.316285 Latitude 6.806507

Methodology and Processing

Sources Statement

Data Access

Notes:

<a href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0">CC BY 4.0</a>

Other Study Description Materials

Related Publications

Citation

Title:

Adeleke, M. L., Al-Kenawy, D., Nasr-Allah, A. M., Murphy, S., El-Naggar, G. O., & Dickson, M. (2018). Fish farmers’ perceptions, impacts and adaptation on/of/to climate change in Africa (The case of Egypt and Nigeria). In Theory and Practice of Climate Adaptation (pp. 269-295). Springer, Cham.

Identification Number:

20.500.12348/1071

Bibliographic Citation:

Adeleke, M. L., Al-Kenawy, D., Nasr-Allah, A. M., Murphy, S., El-Naggar, G. O., & Dickson, M. (2018). Fish farmers’ perceptions, impacts and adaptation on/of/to climate change in Africa (The case of Egypt and Nigeria). In Theory and Practice of Climate Adaptation (pp. 269-295). Springer, Cham.

Other Study-Related Materials

Label:

climate_change_servey_ar_2017_03_19_AN 3 May - Anonymized.xlsx

Notes:

application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.spreadsheetml.sheet

Other Study-Related Materials

Label:

EN Questionnairee for WFC.docx

Text:

Questionnaires

Notes:

application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document