Management strategies that harness the adaptive capacities of small ruminants to improve herd resilience and efficiency Presentation of the ADAPT-HERD project

The main effect of climate change on livestock production systems in the Mediterranean area is to induce changes in feed resource availability. In face of constraining and changing environmental conditions, the challenge is to find practical solutions for herd management to minimize farmer's risk. These solutions should be good enough in terms of efficiency (E), to ensure sufficient income, and good enough in terms of resilience (R), to ensure farm sustainability. The objective of the ADAPT-HERD project is to develop simulation tools capable of evaluating the consequences of management strategies at the herd level, under contrasting and varying environments (Egypt, France, Spain and Tunisia). Our approach considers that biological adaptive capacities of small ruminants can be fully integrated within management strategies to improve R and E by: i) using reproduction practices that provide the best match between herd demand and feed supply; ii) managing groups of animals based on their adaptive capacities (targeting interventions) and iii) managing herd demography to adapt animal numbers to future feed resources. The project will implement data acquisition at animal level (fine-grained experiments on adaptive capacities and phenotyping of local breeds) and at production system level (herd management, feed resource, climate and market conditions). Data will be combined and used in computer simulations to explore different climate change scenarios and management strategies and evaluate their effects on herd R and E. Interfacing modelling tools will be a key aspect of the project, fostering knowledge exchange and collaboration, especially with ongoing projects focusing on genetic selection and breeding solutions to improve R&E in small ruminants.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Puillet, Laurence, Aboul Naga, A.M., Atti, N., Douhard, Frédéric, Friggens, Nicolas C., Gonzalez-Garcia, Eliel, Joy, M., Mohamed, A., Valls-Fox, Hugo
Format: conference_item biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: CIHEAM
Online Access:http://agritrop.cirad.fr/594614/
http://agritrop.cirad.fr/594614/1/ID594614.pdf
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-cirad-fr-594614
record_format koha
spelling dig-cirad-fr-5946142024-01-12T13:16:43Z http://agritrop.cirad.fr/594614/ http://agritrop.cirad.fr/594614/ Management strategies that harness the adaptive capacities of small ruminants to improve herd resilience and efficiency Presentation of the ADAPT-HERD project. Puillet Laurence, Aboul Naga A.M., Atti N., Douhard Frédéric, Friggens Nicolas C., Gonzalez-Garcia Eliel, Joy M., Mohamed A., Valls-Fox Hugo. 2019. . Meknès : CIHEAM-FAO, Résumé, 132. Joint meeting of the FAO-CIHEAM network on sheep and goats and mediterranean pastures: Efficiency and resilience of forage resources and small ruminant production to cope with global challenges in Mediterranean areas. 1, Meknès, Maroc, 23 Octobre 2019/25 Octobre 2019. Management strategies that harness the adaptive capacities of small ruminants to improve herd resilience and efficiency Presentation of the ADAPT-HERD project Puillet, Laurence Aboul Naga, A.M. Atti, N. Douhard, Frédéric Friggens, Nicolas C. Gonzalez-Garcia, Eliel Joy, M. Mohamed, A. Valls-Fox, Hugo eng 2019 CIHEAM The main effect of climate change on livestock production systems in the Mediterranean area is to induce changes in feed resource availability. In face of constraining and changing environmental conditions, the challenge is to find practical solutions for herd management to minimize farmer's risk. These solutions should be good enough in terms of efficiency (E), to ensure sufficient income, and good enough in terms of resilience (R), to ensure farm sustainability. The objective of the ADAPT-HERD project is to develop simulation tools capable of evaluating the consequences of management strategies at the herd level, under contrasting and varying environments (Egypt, France, Spain and Tunisia). Our approach considers that biological adaptive capacities of small ruminants can be fully integrated within management strategies to improve R and E by: i) using reproduction practices that provide the best match between herd demand and feed supply; ii) managing groups of animals based on their adaptive capacities (targeting interventions) and iii) managing herd demography to adapt animal numbers to future feed resources. The project will implement data acquisition at animal level (fine-grained experiments on adaptive capacities and phenotyping of local breeds) and at production system level (herd management, feed resource, climate and market conditions). Data will be combined and used in computer simulations to explore different climate change scenarios and management strategies and evaluate their effects on herd R and E. Interfacing modelling tools will be a key aspect of the project, fostering knowledge exchange and collaboration, especially with ongoing projects focusing on genetic selection and breeding solutions to improve R&E in small ruminants. conference_item info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject Conference info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion http://agritrop.cirad.fr/594614/1/ID594614.pdf text cc_by_nc_nd info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
institution CIRAD FR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cirad-fr
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CIRAD Francia
language eng
description The main effect of climate change on livestock production systems in the Mediterranean area is to induce changes in feed resource availability. In face of constraining and changing environmental conditions, the challenge is to find practical solutions for herd management to minimize farmer's risk. These solutions should be good enough in terms of efficiency (E), to ensure sufficient income, and good enough in terms of resilience (R), to ensure farm sustainability. The objective of the ADAPT-HERD project is to develop simulation tools capable of evaluating the consequences of management strategies at the herd level, under contrasting and varying environments (Egypt, France, Spain and Tunisia). Our approach considers that biological adaptive capacities of small ruminants can be fully integrated within management strategies to improve R and E by: i) using reproduction practices that provide the best match between herd demand and feed supply; ii) managing groups of animals based on their adaptive capacities (targeting interventions) and iii) managing herd demography to adapt animal numbers to future feed resources. The project will implement data acquisition at animal level (fine-grained experiments on adaptive capacities and phenotyping of local breeds) and at production system level (herd management, feed resource, climate and market conditions). Data will be combined and used in computer simulations to explore different climate change scenarios and management strategies and evaluate their effects on herd R and E. Interfacing modelling tools will be a key aspect of the project, fostering knowledge exchange and collaboration, especially with ongoing projects focusing on genetic selection and breeding solutions to improve R&E in small ruminants.
format conference_item
author Puillet, Laurence
Aboul Naga, A.M.
Atti, N.
Douhard, Frédéric
Friggens, Nicolas C.
Gonzalez-Garcia, Eliel
Joy, M.
Mohamed, A.
Valls-Fox, Hugo
spellingShingle Puillet, Laurence
Aboul Naga, A.M.
Atti, N.
Douhard, Frédéric
Friggens, Nicolas C.
Gonzalez-Garcia, Eliel
Joy, M.
Mohamed, A.
Valls-Fox, Hugo
Management strategies that harness the adaptive capacities of small ruminants to improve herd resilience and efficiency Presentation of the ADAPT-HERD project
author_facet Puillet, Laurence
Aboul Naga, A.M.
Atti, N.
Douhard, Frédéric
Friggens, Nicolas C.
Gonzalez-Garcia, Eliel
Joy, M.
Mohamed, A.
Valls-Fox, Hugo
author_sort Puillet, Laurence
title Management strategies that harness the adaptive capacities of small ruminants to improve herd resilience and efficiency Presentation of the ADAPT-HERD project
title_short Management strategies that harness the adaptive capacities of small ruminants to improve herd resilience and efficiency Presentation of the ADAPT-HERD project
title_full Management strategies that harness the adaptive capacities of small ruminants to improve herd resilience and efficiency Presentation of the ADAPT-HERD project
title_fullStr Management strategies that harness the adaptive capacities of small ruminants to improve herd resilience and efficiency Presentation of the ADAPT-HERD project
title_full_unstemmed Management strategies that harness the adaptive capacities of small ruminants to improve herd resilience and efficiency Presentation of the ADAPT-HERD project
title_sort management strategies that harness the adaptive capacities of small ruminants to improve herd resilience and efficiency presentation of the adapt-herd project
publisher CIHEAM
url http://agritrop.cirad.fr/594614/
http://agritrop.cirad.fr/594614/1/ID594614.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT puilletlaurence managementstrategiesthatharnesstheadaptivecapacitiesofsmallruminantstoimproveherdresilienceandefficiencypresentationoftheadaptherdproject
AT aboulnagaam managementstrategiesthatharnesstheadaptivecapacitiesofsmallruminantstoimproveherdresilienceandefficiencypresentationoftheadaptherdproject
AT attin managementstrategiesthatharnesstheadaptivecapacitiesofsmallruminantstoimproveherdresilienceandefficiencypresentationoftheadaptherdproject
AT douhardfrederic managementstrategiesthatharnesstheadaptivecapacitiesofsmallruminantstoimproveherdresilienceandefficiencypresentationoftheadaptherdproject
AT friggensnicolasc managementstrategiesthatharnesstheadaptivecapacitiesofsmallruminantstoimproveherdresilienceandefficiencypresentationoftheadaptherdproject
AT gonzalezgarciaeliel managementstrategiesthatharnesstheadaptivecapacitiesofsmallruminantstoimproveherdresilienceandefficiencypresentationoftheadaptherdproject
AT joym managementstrategiesthatharnesstheadaptivecapacitiesofsmallruminantstoimproveherdresilienceandefficiencypresentationoftheadaptherdproject
AT mohameda managementstrategiesthatharnesstheadaptivecapacitiesofsmallruminantstoimproveherdresilienceandefficiencypresentationoftheadaptherdproject
AT vallsfoxhugo managementstrategiesthatharnesstheadaptivecapacitiesofsmallruminantstoimproveherdresilienceandefficiencypresentationoftheadaptherdproject
_version_ 1792499881058762752