Review Article · Full Text

Socio-economic Impacts of Ecosystem Service Degradation in Southern Ecological Zone of Taraba State Nigeria

Volume 1, Issue 3 December 22, 2025
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Global Open Access Journal of Science Pages: 192–203

Socio-economic Impacts of Ecosystem Service Degradation in Southern Ecological Zone of Taraba State Nigeria

1 Department of Geography, Taraba State University, Jalingo Nigeria
2 Taraba State Geographic Information Services (TAGIS), Taraba State, Nigeria
* Corresponding Author: Emeka Daniel Oruonye — eoruonye@gmail.com
Corresponding Address: Department of Geography, Taraba State University, Jalingo Nigeria
Journal Global Open Access Journal of Science
Article Type Review Article
Article Topic
Volume / Issue Volume 1, Issue 3
Pages 192–203
Published December 22, 2025

Abstract

The degradation of ecosystem services poses a critical threat to rural livelihoods and socio-economic stabil­ity in resource-dependent regions of sub-Saharan Africa. This study investigates the perceived socio-economic impacts of ecosystem service decline across five Local Government Areas (LGAs); Bali, Gashaka, Sardauna, Ta­kum, and Ussa—in the Southern Ecological Zone of Taraba State, Nigeria. Employing a mixed-methods approach, data were collected from 450 randomly sampled households using a structured questionnaire with a 5-point Likert scale, complemented by 15 key informant interviews. Descriptive statistics, one-way ANOVA, and the­matic analysis were utilized to analyze the data. Findings reveal a hierarchy of perceived impacts, with declin­ing community well-being ranked as the most severe (Mean = 3.69), followed by disproportionate impacts on women (Mean = 2.10) and heightened youth unemployment (Mean = 2.09). Spatial analysis identified Ussa LGA as experiencing the highest socio-economic stress (Mean = 2.86), attributable to its high forest dependence and ecological fragility. While perceived severity varied across LGAs, statistical tests indicated no significant differ­ences in perceptions between groups for most impact indicators, underscoring a universally shared concern. The study concludes that ecosystem degradation is a pervasive driver of socio-economic vulnerability, exacerbating gender disparities, limiting livelihood options, and undermining community resilience. The results advocate for context-specific, gender-sensitive interventions that integrate ecological restoration with sustainable liveli­hood programs to mitigate these cascading impacts and support the achievement of local and global sustainable development goals.

Keywords

Ecosystem Service Degradation Forest-Dependent Communities Gender Vulnerability Livelihood Resilience Socio-Economic Impacts

How to Cite

Shamaki Rimamnyang Ayina, Emeka Daniel Oruonye, Joshua, Ma’aku Mark, Benjamin Ezekiel Bwadi. Socio-economic Impacts of Ecosystem Service Degradation in Southern Ecological Zone of Taraba State Nigeria. Global Open Access Journal of Science; 1(3):192–203.
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