How Does Climate Change Affect Tomato and Okra Production? Evidence from Nigeria

Author:

Onyeneke Robert Ugochukwu1ORCID,Agyarko Fred Fosu2,Onyeneke Chinenye Judith1,Osuji Emeka Emmanuel1ORCID,Ibeneme Patience Afor3,Esfahani Iman Janghorban4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Agriculture, Alex Ekwueme Federal University Ndufu-Alike, Ikwo 482131, Nigeria

2. Institute for Scientific and Technological Information (INSTI), Accra P.O. Box M 32, Ghana

3. Department of Geography, Alex Ekwueme Federal University Ndufu-Alike, Ikwo 482131, Nigeria

4. Glopex Co., Ltd., R & D Center B2065, GeumGang Penterium IX Tower A2801, Dongtancheomdansaneop 1-ro 27, Hwaseong-si 18469, Gyeonggi-do, Republic of Korea

Abstract

This study examined the impacts of climate change on okra and tomato yields. Fertilizer consumption and credit to the crop sector were considered as covariates in the analysis. Time-series data, spanning a period of 40 years, were obtained from various sources. An autoregressive distributed lag model was applied to analyze short- and long-term impacts of climate change and agricultural inputs on okra and tomato yields. Not all variables were stationary at levels (order zero), but they were all significant at first difference, indicating the presence of cointegration. The Bound’s test F-ratio was statistically significant and implied the presence of long- and short-term relationships among the variables studied. The mean temperatures had negative impacts on okra and tomato yields in both the short and long terms. Credit guaranteed to the crop sector had positive short- and long-term impacts on tomato yield; fertilizer consumption had a negative long-term impact on okra yield. Our study concludes that climate change, particularly rising temperature, impacts herbaceous fruit crop production in Nigeria. Therefore, we recommend that breeding and disseminating climate-smart tomato and okra varieties will help fruit crop farmers respond to rising temperatures.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Plant Science,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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