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Smallholder Dairy Systems in the Kenya Highlands:
Breed preferences and breeding practices
Abstract
A stratified random sample, cross-sectional survey of 1755 households
in the Kenya highlands was conducted between June 1996 and April
1998 to evaluate the rationale underlying smallholders' breeding
decisions. Additional data were collected in a follow-up survey
of 50 households sub-sampled from the main survey sample. Cattle-keeping
households were 987, of which 62% kept Friesian (FR) and Ayrshire
(AY), 22% kept East African Zebu, Boran and Sahiwal (ZB) cattle
and 16% kept Guernsey and Jersey (GJ) breeds. Farmers keeping ZB
and GJ ranked producing milk for family consumption the most important
reason for keeping cattle, whereas those keeping FR and AY ranked
producing milk for cash income most highly. Farmers' relative preference
for GJ, AY and FR for high milk yield over hardiness was respectively
3.46, 7.58 and 17.63 times more when compared with preference for
ZB. Additional attributes rated highly in the Bos taurus breeds
were high butterfat yields, heavier bodyweight, unselective feeding
behaviour in zero-grazing systems, hardiness and disease resistance
in semi-zero- and free-grazing systems and high market value. Breeding
practices tended to favour the use of dairy breeds of larger body
size, particularly Friesian, which is inconsistent with technical
recommendations that favour the use of the smaller dairy cattle
breeds. These findings suggest that multiple objectives, including
the need for more milk, adaptability to local feed conditions and
diseases, and the provision of non-market production such as manure,
insurance and financing roles of cattle, underlie smallholders'
breeding decisions in the Kenya highlands
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