Across country dairy breeding strategies in sub-Saharan Africa

Genetic improvement of farmed livestock has had a major impact on productivity, resource use efficiency, and food security, in many temperate countries over the last 70 years. Being permanent, cumulative and usually highly cost effective, genetic improvement is also of huge potential value in countries mostly in need of improved food security, like those in sub-Saharan Africa. However, most smallholder dairy farmers in these countries have not benefited from animal genetic improvement because of inconsistent breeding strategies, poor breeding infrastructure, small herd sizes and lack of performance recording systems. As a consequence, genetic improvement initiatives have mostly relied on importation of exotic breeds. Although when done properly this may underpin dairy production, there is concern that imported stocks are not always suitable and ad-hoc importations may marginalise indigenous genetic resources. With recent improvements in data recording and implementation of organised breeding schemes, together with recent advances in statistical genetics, there is an opportunity to develop new approaches to livestock improvement, suitable for application in sub-Saharan Africa. However, these new approaches need to be investigated and tested. Through the use of a scoping survey and analysis of dairy performance data of Holstein-Friesian and Jersey breeds from Kenya, South Africa and Zimbabwe, this thesis aimed to: (a) Examine the state of dairy improvement infrastructure with emphasis on the challenges and opportunities under different production systems. (b) Determine the commonalities in the source of sires used in dairy breeding among different countries. (c) Estimate genetic parameters based on the performance and pedigree information of cows within and across countries. (d) Determine the potential genetic gains that could be achieved from selection practiced within and across countries. Survey respondents identified challenges facing the different production systems and how they can be solved. Across the animal ancestry in seven generations for both studied breeds, family groups performing in the different countries could be traced back to common sires. Running genetic evaluations using pooled data from the three countries led to better genetic progress than using data from individual countries. Individual countries benefited at varying levels from the joint genetic evaluation of production and reproduction traits. A joint across-country genetic improvement programme has the potential to enhance future breeding strategies in sub-Saharan Africa.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Opoola, O.
Format: Thesis biblioteca
Language:English
Published: University of Edinburgh 2018-12-30
Subjects:livestock, dairies, genetics, animal breeding,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/100702
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-1007022023-03-13T09:17:02Z Across country dairy breeding strategies in sub-Saharan Africa Opoola, O. livestock dairies genetics animal breeding Genetic improvement of farmed livestock has had a major impact on productivity, resource use efficiency, and food security, in many temperate countries over the last 70 years. Being permanent, cumulative and usually highly cost effective, genetic improvement is also of huge potential value in countries mostly in need of improved food security, like those in sub-Saharan Africa. However, most smallholder dairy farmers in these countries have not benefited from animal genetic improvement because of inconsistent breeding strategies, poor breeding infrastructure, small herd sizes and lack of performance recording systems. As a consequence, genetic improvement initiatives have mostly relied on importation of exotic breeds. Although when done properly this may underpin dairy production, there is concern that imported stocks are not always suitable and ad-hoc importations may marginalise indigenous genetic resources. With recent improvements in data recording and implementation of organised breeding schemes, together with recent advances in statistical genetics, there is an opportunity to develop new approaches to livestock improvement, suitable for application in sub-Saharan Africa. However, these new approaches need to be investigated and tested. Through the use of a scoping survey and analysis of dairy performance data of Holstein-Friesian and Jersey breeds from Kenya, South Africa and Zimbabwe, this thesis aimed to: (a) Examine the state of dairy improvement infrastructure with emphasis on the challenges and opportunities under different production systems. (b) Determine the commonalities in the source of sires used in dairy breeding among different countries. (c) Estimate genetic parameters based on the performance and pedigree information of cows within and across countries. (d) Determine the potential genetic gains that could be achieved from selection practiced within and across countries. Survey respondents identified challenges facing the different production systems and how they can be solved. Across the animal ancestry in seven generations for both studied breeds, family groups performing in the different countries could be traced back to common sires. Running genetic evaluations using pooled data from the three countries led to better genetic progress than using data from individual countries. Individual countries benefited at varying levels from the joint genetic evaluation of production and reproduction traits. A joint across-country genetic improvement programme has the potential to enhance future breeding strategies in sub-Saharan Africa. 2018-12-30 2019-04-05T14:19:10Z 2019-04-05T14:19:10Z Thesis Opoola, O. 2018. Across country dairy breeding strategies in sub-Saharan Africa. PhD thesis. Edinburgh, UK: University of Edinburgh. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/100702 en CC-BY-4.0 Open Access application/pdf University of Edinburgh
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic livestock
dairies
genetics
animal breeding
livestock
dairies
genetics
animal breeding
spellingShingle livestock
dairies
genetics
animal breeding
livestock
dairies
genetics
animal breeding
Opoola, O.
Across country dairy breeding strategies in sub-Saharan Africa
description Genetic improvement of farmed livestock has had a major impact on productivity, resource use efficiency, and food security, in many temperate countries over the last 70 years. Being permanent, cumulative and usually highly cost effective, genetic improvement is also of huge potential value in countries mostly in need of improved food security, like those in sub-Saharan Africa. However, most smallholder dairy farmers in these countries have not benefited from animal genetic improvement because of inconsistent breeding strategies, poor breeding infrastructure, small herd sizes and lack of performance recording systems. As a consequence, genetic improvement initiatives have mostly relied on importation of exotic breeds. Although when done properly this may underpin dairy production, there is concern that imported stocks are not always suitable and ad-hoc importations may marginalise indigenous genetic resources. With recent improvements in data recording and implementation of organised breeding schemes, together with recent advances in statistical genetics, there is an opportunity to develop new approaches to livestock improvement, suitable for application in sub-Saharan Africa. However, these new approaches need to be investigated and tested. Through the use of a scoping survey and analysis of dairy performance data of Holstein-Friesian and Jersey breeds from Kenya, South Africa and Zimbabwe, this thesis aimed to: (a) Examine the state of dairy improvement infrastructure with emphasis on the challenges and opportunities under different production systems. (b) Determine the commonalities in the source of sires used in dairy breeding among different countries. (c) Estimate genetic parameters based on the performance and pedigree information of cows within and across countries. (d) Determine the potential genetic gains that could be achieved from selection practiced within and across countries. Survey respondents identified challenges facing the different production systems and how they can be solved. Across the animal ancestry in seven generations for both studied breeds, family groups performing in the different countries could be traced back to common sires. Running genetic evaluations using pooled data from the three countries led to better genetic progress than using data from individual countries. Individual countries benefited at varying levels from the joint genetic evaluation of production and reproduction traits. A joint across-country genetic improvement programme has the potential to enhance future breeding strategies in sub-Saharan Africa.
format Thesis
topic_facet livestock
dairies
genetics
animal breeding
author Opoola, O.
author_facet Opoola, O.
author_sort Opoola, O.
title Across country dairy breeding strategies in sub-Saharan Africa
title_short Across country dairy breeding strategies in sub-Saharan Africa
title_full Across country dairy breeding strategies in sub-Saharan Africa
title_fullStr Across country dairy breeding strategies in sub-Saharan Africa
title_full_unstemmed Across country dairy breeding strategies in sub-Saharan Africa
title_sort across country dairy breeding strategies in sub-saharan africa
publisher University of Edinburgh
publishDate 2018-12-30
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/100702
work_keys_str_mv AT opoolao acrosscountrydairybreedingstrategiesinsubsaharanafrica
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