Replication Data for: Farmers’ Perceptions of and Adaptations to Changing Climate in the Melamchi Valley of Nepal

Knowledge of farmers’ perceptions of and adaptations to climate change is important to inform policies addressing the risk of climate change to farmers. This case study explored those issues in the Melamchi Valley of Nepal through a survey of 365 households and focus group discussions in 6 communities using a Community-Based Risk Screening Tool–Adaptation and Livelihoods (CRiSTAL). Analysis of climate trends in the study area for 1979–2009 showed that mean annual temperatures rose by 1.02uC and the frequency of drought increased measurably after 2003. Farmers reported increases in crop pests, hailstorms, landslides, floods, thunderstorms, and erratic precipitation as climate-related hazards affecting agriculture. They responded in a variety of ways including changing farming practices, selling livestock, milk, and eggs, and engaging in daily wage labor and seasonal labor migration. With more efficient support and planning, some of these measures could be adjusted to better meet current and future risks from climate change.

Dataset’s Files

Sujakhu et al 2016.pdf
MD5: c4db85396d796431bdd53bc9989211a4


Terms of use
This dataset is made available under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (CC-BY-4.0). The license allows you, the user, to copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format and/or transform, and build upon the material for any purpose, even commercially.
Creative Commons License.
Authors

Sujakhu, Nani Maiya; Ranjitkar, Sailesh; Niraula, Rabin Raj; Pokharel, Bharat K; Schmidt-Vogt, Dietrich; Xu, Jianchu

Keywords

adaptation strategies, climate change, cristal, melamchi valley, nepal

Publisher

East and Central Asia

Publication date

12 Apr 2018

DOI

https://doi.org/10.34725/DVN/ZEPGD7