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Climate Change and Development in the Gambia - Challenges to Ecosystem Goods and Services

Occupying a total area of 11,300 sq km, with a population density of 130 persons per sq km, The Republic of the Gambia is one of the most densely populated countries on continental Africa. Because The Gambia possesses only minimal commercial mineral resources and manufacturing sector, agriculture is the primary source of livelihood for many Gambians, employing more than 68% of the workforce and accounting for about 40% of the Gambia’s export earnings contributing about 26% of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP). Agriculture is predominantly subsistence and rain-fed with farmers relying on traditional shifting cultivation and livestock management practices. Over the last fifty years cropland area increased from under 100,000 ha to over 300,000 at the expense of natural woodland and wetland ecosystems.

Over 51% of The Gambia’s population resides in urban areas. Driven by variable and degrading climate, decline in agricultural productivity in rural areas, and changes in economic activity (tourism, petty trade and small scale manufacturing) in the ecologically favorable West Coast Region, urban population has increased from 110,000 in 1973 to 680,000 in 2003. Between 1980 and 2001, built-up area in the Gambia has increased from 2,725 ha to more than 19,000 ha with over 50% of the increase occurring in Kombo (KMC and the districts of Kombo).

The Gambia’s climate is Sahelian characterized by high variability in the amount and distribution of annual precipitation. Analysis of long-term climate data shows that the past 50 years have seen a decrease in total amount of precipitation, length of rainy season, and increase in length and frequency of extreme weather events such as droughts and dust storms. The low-lying topography, combined by high dependence on subsistence rain-fed agriculture and inadequate drainage and storm water management system in a context of rapidly expanding un-regulated urban expansion has placed the Gambia among those countries most vulnerable to climate change.

This study examines threats associated with anthropogenic climate change; vulnerable ecosystems and ecosystem services; and examines how to integrate responses to climate change and adaptation measures into strategies for poverty reduction, to ensure sustainable development.

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Date (Publication)
Presentation form
Digital document
Status
Completed
User
  Center for Development Research, Department for Political and Cultural Change, University of Bonn - Irit Eguavoen ( Senior Researcher )
Walter-Flex-Straße 3 , Bonn , 53113 , Germany
+49-228-73-4912
Author
  Center for International Earth Science Information Network (CIESIN) - Malanding S. Jaiteh ( Geographic Information Specialist )
Palisades , NY , United States of America
Maintenance and update frequency
Unknown
Theme
  • governance
  • development
  • environmental and climate change
  • ecosystem services
Region
  • Gambia
Other constraints
No restrictions
Metadata language
English
Character set
UTF8
Topic category
  • Society
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Distribution format
  • PDF ( )

Distributor

Distributor
  -
OnLine resource
Climate Change and Development in the Gambia - Challenges to Ecosystem Goods and Services ( WWW:LINK-1.0-http--link )

source for download

File identifier
95172d95-7cdd-4a3d-a1a3-eaed38257e0e XML
Metadata language
English
Character set
UTF8
Parent identifier
8ae26013-56bc-4b78-a4f7-a53e0472cfce 8ae26013-56bc-4b78-a4f7-a53e0472cfce
Date stamp
2016-01-06T12:58:27
Metadata standard name
ISO 19115:2003/19139
Metadata standard version
1.0
Author
  - Irit Eguavouen ( )
 
 

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Keywords

development ecosystem services environmental and climate change governance

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