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Smallholder Dairy Systems in the Kenya Highlands: Cattle population dynamics under increasing intensification

From the Abstract
A cross-sectional stratified random sample survey of 1755 households in the Kenya highlands was conducted between June 1996 and April 1998 to quantify cattle population dynamics in smallholder herds. The free-, semi-zero- and zero-grazing systems practised represented increasing levels of intensification of the farms. Additional data were collected in a follow-up survey of 50 households from the main survey sample. In the main survey there were 987 cattle-keeping households, of which 44%, 33% and 23% practised zero-, semi-zero- and free-grazing systems, respectively. Compared to free-grazing, zero-grazing farms had a higher proportion of cows in the herd (0.62 vs. 0.51) but lower calving rates (0.52 vs. 0.69), higher losses of potential heifer replacements (0.47 vs. 0.38), fewer heifer replacements as a proportion of cows disposed (0.46 vs. 1.11) and shorter productive life (3.8 vs. 4.8 years). Semi-zero-grazing farms had intermediate performance. They and the zero-grazing farms were unable to maintain their herds without acquiring replacements externally. Animal class mortality rates were high (7% to 19%) regardless of grazing system practised. Diseases counted for the largest proportion of animal exits: 85% of heifer-calves, 38% of heifers and 36% of cows. According to farmers' ranking, East Coast fever and Anaplasmosis diseases assumed less importance with a shift from free-grazing to zero-grazing system.

A household's need for cash was the second most frequent reason after disease for animal exits: 33% of heifers and 27% of cows, indicating the importance of cattle as liquid capital assets. The results showed that many zero-grazed herds required external sources of replacement animals to sustain their populations. Solutions to this constraint will include technical and institutional innovations to serve small-scale farms that may result in greater complementarities between the small- and large-scale production components of the dairy sub-sector.

Author: Bebe, B.O., Udo, H.M.J., Rowlands, G.J. and Thorpe, W.
Date: 2003b
Type of publication: Journal article in Livestock Production Science 82: 211-221
Publisher: Elsevier BV, 2003
Available on-line at:
www.smallholderdairy.org/publications/Journal%20publications/Bebe%20et%20al-2003-cattle%20population%20dynamics.pdf

 

 
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