Transcript Document

Analyzing resilience in dryland agro-ecosystems
A case study of the Makanya catchment in Tanzania
Elin Enfors
Natural Resources Management
Department of Systems Ecology
Stockholm University
Based on manuscript by Enfors and Gordon (2006), submitted to World Development
• Presenting a conceptual framework for analyzing resilience
and conceptualizing alternative trajectories of development
in smallholder farming systems
• Applying this framework on the Makanya catchment in Tanzania
A combination of qualitative and quantitative methods used:
• Interviews with local farmers, extensionists and authorities about
agro-ecological changes and underlying driving forces
• aerial photo/satellite image interpretations of land cover change
• analysis of rainfall dynamics
Why focus on dryland agro-ecosystems?
• 250 million people in SSA: poverty, population growth, and malnourishment
• Small-scale rainfed farming main income source, but productivity low
• People depend on ecosystem services such as fodder for livestock,firewood
and construction materials to cover basic needs
• Climatic constraints and poor soils limit the agro-ecological productivity and
make drylands inherently dynamic and vulnerable
• Land degradation reduce both productivity and capacity to cope with change
The resilience concept
Definition: the capacity of a social-ecological system to absorb changes,
and to reorganize after and adapt to them, so that essential functions
are not lost
• Social-ecological systems can have multiple stability domains,
characterized by different functions and feed-backs
• Low resilience increases the probability for shifts between these
• Most systems are robust over a range of conditions but respond
strongly when key variables approached certain thresholds
The resilience concept applied
The main function of agro-ecosystems is to generate food and other
ecosystem services needed by the population
Two alternative states envisioned for this system: one desirable where this
capacity is up-held over time, one degraded where is is not
We propose that the “soil water index” and the “ecosystem insurance
capacity” are two of the key variables in this system
Soil water index - amount water available per capita for food production
• Rainfall and run-on
• Probability of actually receiving this due to dry-spells etc.
• Soil properties affecting plant available water and plant productivity
response to this water
Ecosystem insurance capacity - capacity of the surrounding landscape to
provide ecosystem services that could buffer yield variations
• Availability of such ecosystem services (timber products, wild life etc.)
• Capacity of the resource base generating these to recover after periods
of stress
The conceptual framework
The Makanya catchment
The Colonial period 1961
The Development of
independent Tanzania
1961-2985
The economic
liberalization period
1985-
Socio-political structure
• Low population that
live from subsistence
farming
• The colonials rule
through local chiefs
• Imposed cash crop
production
• Population growth,
improved health and
education
• Socialism, selfreliance and ujamaa
national goals
• Villagization
• Economic crisis leads
to reforms and SAP
• Multi-party system
adopted
• NGOs important actors
in rural development
• Participation on the
agenda
Natural resource
management
• Colonial laws to
protect land, water and
forests exist parallel to
local institutions for
resource access/control
• Local chiefs enforce
these rules and laws
• Replacement of local
chiefs leads to weaker
protection of NR
• Farming and livestock
keeping more
permanent
• By-laws created to
protect the environment
• By-laws for
environmental
protection inefficient
• Far reaching policy
changes make
alternative forms of
NRM possible
Local perceptions of
agro-ecological
conditions
• Natural resources used
in daily life readily
available
• More reliable rainfall
• Only a small portion of
the land used for
farming
• Expansion of agr. land,
farmers cultivate both
seasons
• Protected areas
encroached upon
• Decreasing forest /
bush land cover
• Disappearance of
wildlife
• Drier conditions
• Lack of farming land in
spite of expansion, low
soil fertility
• Illegal logging - large
scale problem
• Natural resources used
in daily life increasingly
difficult to find
• Low rainfall and pop.
growth seen as reasons
behind this change
The narratives on agro-ecological change and land cover change analysis largely
support each other
Analysis of rain data
High variability, no significant changes
Significant increase, p=0.024
Summary
• Over the past 50 years the landscape in the catchment has
undergone considerable changes: reduction in bush land and
expansion of farm land, loss of ecosystem services other than food
• At the same time the frequency of dry-spells has increased
significantly and the population in Same district is estimated to have
increased with more than 200 %
Applying the resilience framework on this case
a)
Population increase outgrows
management of farming land ->
decline in SWI, accelerated by
increasing dry-spell frequency
b)
Low SWI -> increased dependency
on ecosystem insurance capacity.
Institutions for access and control
of NR collapse -> the system moves
to the degraded state
c)
Today: a system where production
of food and other ecosystem
services is not upheld over time
Potential for reversing a negative trend
A window of opportunity for change
seems to be opening:
• Awareness of the problem
• Practical solutions available - soil and
water system innovations: water
harvesting, conservation tillage etc.
• Policy changes the last 10 years have
made local initiatives for NRM possible
• New local institutions are being built
Thanks for listening!