Cocoa eats the food: expansion of cocoa into food croplands in the Juabeso District, Ghana

被引:0
|
作者
Ebunoluwa O. Ajagun
George Ashiagbor
Winston A. Asante
Benjamin A. Gyampoh
Kwasi A. Obirikorang
Emmanuel Acheampong
机构
[1] Federal Ministry of Environment,Federal Department of Forestry
[2] Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST),Faculty of Natural Resources Management
来源
Food Security | 2022年 / 14卷
关键词
The Sustainable Trade Initiative; World cocoa foundation; Land use land cover; Remote Sensing;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
There is evidence that cocoa is expanding into food croplands in cocoa-producing landscapes in Ghana. This calls for effective monitoring to inform policy and interventions in these landscapes to minimise the possible adverse effects of cropland area loss on food self-sufficiency. This study explored how farmers shift land use from food crops to cocoa and the underlying factors influencing the shift. Land cover maps for the years 1986, 1999 and 2017 were analysed to detect cropland loss to cocoa. The views of 407 cocoa farmers in the Juabeso District were sampled using questionnaires. Focus group discussions were used as a qualitative data collection approach to validate the information generated through the land cover mapping and farmers' survey and provide additional information to explain the data. The factors that drive farmers to convert croplands to cocoa farms were analysed using binary logistic regression. Results showed that croplands experienced a decline from 57.57 km2 to 52.62 km2 between 1986 and 1999, then to 28.62 km2 in 2017 at the expense of cocoa. Sustainable financial security (56.78%), unavailability of land for cocoa farming (25.15%); societal norms (3.75%); and prevention of land tenure conflict (2.75%) were the main reasons for the conversions. Farming experience and land tenure were the key socio-economic variables that influenced farmers' decisions to convert. The study's findings provide insights on the need to engage farmers, government and other actors to address farmers' quest to maximise income from cocoa farming through expansion and related land insecurity concerns without fully conceptualising future implications for food self-sufficiency in the landscape. The study recommends that land sparing for crop cultivation or cocoa agroforestry be pursued in a manner that will aid an easy and compatible combination of food crops in cocoa farms at all stages of maturity. The Government of Ghana’s flagship policy, “planting for food and jobs” should also intensify interventions to cultivate food crops and raise awareness on the implications of the conversions on livelihood and food self-sufficiency implications.
引用
收藏
页码:451 / 470
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] SUBSTITUTE MATCHES COCOA ATTRIBUTES, MATES TO FOOD APPLICATIONS
    SPIEGEL, LS
    FOOD PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT, 1977, 11 (07): : 19 - &
  • [22] Assessing land use change from food croplands to rubber in Ghana's Ellembelle district: Implications for food self-sufficiency
    Ashiagbor, George
    Quarshie, Victor
    Inusah, Sandra Sawdiatu
    Essah, Isaac Stanisluv
    Abubakar, Sinka Khadijah
    Tetteh, Erasmus Narteh
    Asante, Winston Adams
    SCIENTIFIC AFRICAN, 2024, 26
  • [23] EFFECT OF FOOD EMULSIFIERS ON POLYMORPHIC TRANSITIONS OF COCOA BUTTER
    GARTI, N
    SCHLICHTER, J
    SARIG, S
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN OIL CHEMISTS SOCIETY, 1986, 63 (02) : 230 - 236
  • [24] Pixel-based and object-oriented approaches in segregating cocoa from forest in the Juabeso-Bia landscape of Ghana
    Ashiagbor, George
    Forkuo, Eric K.
    Asante, Winston A.
    Acheampong, Emmanuel
    Quaye-Ballard, Jonathan A.
    Boamah, Prince
    Mohammed, Yakubu
    Foli, Ernest
    REMOTE SENSING APPLICATIONS-SOCIETY AND ENVIRONMENT, 2020, 19
  • [25] STRUCTURE OF SOIL FOOD WEB IN SMALLHOLDER COCOA PLANTATION, SOUTH KONAWE DISTRICT, SOUTHEAST SULAWESI, INDONESIA
    Kilowasid, Laode Muhammad Harjoni
    Syamsudin, Tati Suryati
    Sulystiawati, Endah
    Susilo, Fransiscus-Xaverius
    AGRIVITA, 2014, 36 (01): : 33 - 47
  • [26] A new food frequency questionnaire to assess chocolate and cocoa consumption
    Vicente, Filipa
    Saldana-Ruiz, Sandra
    Rabanal, Manel
    Rodriguez-Lagunas, Maria J.
    Pereira, Paula
    Perez-Cano, Francisco J.
    Castell, Margarida
    NUTRITION, 2016, 32 (7-8) : 811 - 817
  • [27] Biomarkers of food intake for cocoa and liquorice (products): a systematic review
    Charlotte C. J. R. Michielsen
    Enrique Almanza-Aguilera
    Elske M. Brouwer-Brolsma
    Mireia Urpi-Sarda
    Lydia A. Afman
    Genes & Nutrition, 2018, 13
  • [28] Food Evolution: The Impact of Society and Science on the Fermentation of Cocoa Beans
    Ozturk, Gulustan
    Young, Glenn M.
    COMPREHENSIVE REVIEWS IN FOOD SCIENCE AND FOOD SAFETY, 2017, 16 (03): : 431 - 455
  • [29] Food and pH effects on the absorption of cocoa flavanols and dimers.
    Holt, RR
    Schramm, DD
    Polagruto, JA
    Lazarus, SA
    Keen, CL
    FASEB JOURNAL, 2002, 16 (05): : A1009 - A1009
  • [30] EFFECT OF FOOD EMULSIFIERS ON POLYMORPHIC TRANSITIONS OF COCOA BUTTER.
    Garti, Nissim
    Schlichter, Judith
    Sarig, Sara
    JAOCS, Journal of the American Oil Chemists' Society, 1986, 63 (02): : 230 - 236