Literature DB >> 33503036

Awareness of climate change's impacts and motivation to adapt are not enough to drive action: A look of Puerto Rican farmers after Hurricane Maria.

Luis Alexis Rodríguez-Cruz1,2, Meredith T Niles2,3.   

Abstract

Understanding how perceptions around motivation, capacity, and climate change's impacts relate to the adoption of adaptation practices in light of experiences with extreme weather events is important in assessing farmers' adaptive capacity. However, very little of this work has occurred in islands, which may have different vulnerabilities and capacities for adaptation. Data of surveyed farmers throughout Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria (n = 405, 87% response rate) were used in a structural equation model to explore the extent to which their adoption of agricultural practices and management strategies was driven by perceptions of motivation, vulnerability, and capacity as a function of their psychological distance of climate change. Our results show that half of farmers did not adopt any practice or strategy, even though the majority perceived themselves capable and motivated to adapt to climate change, and understood their farms to be vulnerable to future extreme events. Furthermore, adoption was neither linked to these adaptation perceptions, nor to their psychological distance of climate change, which we found to be both near and far. Puerto Rican farmers' showed a broad awareness of climate change's impacts both locally and globally in different dimensions (temporal, spatial, and social), and climate distance was not linked to reported damages from Hurricane Maria or to previous extreme weather events. These results suggest that we may be reaching a tipping point for extreme events as a driver for climate belief and action, especially in places where there is a high level of climate change awareness and continued experience of compounded impacts. Further, high perceived capacity and motivation are not linked to actual adaptation behaviors, suggesting that broadening adaptation analyses beyond individual perceptions and capacities as drivers of climate adaptation may give us a better understanding of the determinants to strengthen farmers' adaptive capacity.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 33503036      PMCID: PMC7840010          DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0244512

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS One        ISSN: 1932-6203            Impact factor:   3.240


  12 in total

1.  The psychological distance of climate change.

Authors:  Alexa Spence; Wouter Poortinga; Nick Pidgeon
Journal:  Risk Anal       Date:  2011-10-12       Impact factor: 4.000

2.  The Campesino-to-Campesino agroecology movement of ANAP in Cuba: social process methodology in the construction of sustainable peasant agriculture and food sovereignty.

Authors:  Peter Michael Rosset; Braulio Machín Sosa; Adilén María Roque Jaime; Dana Rocío Ávila Lozano
Journal:  J Peasant Stud       Date:  2011

3.  Farmers prone to drought risk: why some farmers undertake farm-level risk-reduction measures while others not?

Authors:  Tagel Gebrehiwot; Anne van der Veen
Journal:  Environ Manage       Date:  2014-12-24       Impact factor: 3.266

4.  Smallholder Farmer Adoption of Climate-Related Adaptation Strategies: The Importance of Vulnerability Context, Livelihood Assets, and Climate Perceptions.

Authors:  X A Shinbrot; K W Jones; A Rivera-Castañeda; W López-Báez; D S Ojima
Journal:  Environ Manage       Date:  2019-03-05       Impact factor: 3.266

5.  Explicating Experience: Development of a Valid Scale of Past Hazard Experience for Tornadoes.

Authors:  Julie L Demuth
Journal:  Risk Anal       Date:  2018-03-23       Impact factor: 4.000

6.  The Future is Now: Reducing Psychological Distance to Increase Public Engagement with Climate Change.

Authors:  Charlotte Jones; Donald W Hine; Anthony D G Marks
Journal:  Risk Anal       Date:  2016-03-14       Impact factor: 4.000

Review 7.  The psychology of transcending the here and now.

Authors:  Nira Liberman; Yaacov Trope
Journal:  Science       Date:  2008-11-21       Impact factor: 47.728

8.  Perception of climate change and its impact by smallholders in pastoral/agropastoral systems of Borana, South Ethiopia.

Authors:  Nega Debela; Caroline Mohammed; Kerry Bridle; Ross Corkrey; David McNeil
Journal:  Springerplus       Date:  2015-05-20

9.  Global and local concerns: what attitudes and beliefs motivate farmers to mitigate and adapt to climate change?

Authors:  Van R Haden; Meredith T Niles; Mark Lubell; Joshua Perlman; Louise E Jackson
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-12-26       Impact factor: 3.240

10.  Response of Coffee Farms to Hurricane Maria: Resistance and Resilience from an Extreme Climatic Event.

Authors:  Ivette Perfecto; Zachary Hajian-Forooshani; Aaron Iverson; Amarilys D Irizarry; Javier Lugo-Perez; Nicholas Medina; Chatura Vaidya; Alexa White; John Vandermeer
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2019-10-30       Impact factor: 4.379

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