African feed resources and ruminant production from the ecological and socio-economic viewpoint

Africa may be broadly characterized into five ecological zones; Arid, semi-arid, sub-humid, humid and highland. Each zone has characteristic socio-economic systems which are reflected in the livestock husbandry. The socio-economic systems of the arid zones have to be highly mobile and able to cope with periodic catastrophic droughts but the people's traditional response of moving to wetter zones is increasingly curtailed. Livestock were dominant in the traditional systems of semi-arid zones but there is increasing reliance on subsistence cripping which is encroaching on vital dry season grazing and accelerating land degradation. The sub-humid zone is currently the least stressed but the accelerated activity of immigrant small and large farmers is moving ahead of the scientific or even ethno-scientific knowledge of sustainable systems. The socio-economy of the humid zone tends to be very sedentary and livestock husbandry tends to be secondary to cultivation and based on very low input strategies. The highlands are densely populated so land is at a premission. The farm families inability to afford inputs necessary for good husbandry when faced with adversity can initiate a worsening poverty cycle. African agriculture is under stress but solutions can be found by research on components of the traditional systems.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kaufmann, Ralph R. von
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 1992
Subjects:animal production, ruminants, feeds, ecological zonation, socioeconomic aspects,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/29729
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