Ejemplares similares: Implications of feed scarcity for gender roles in ruminant livestock production
- Gender roles and child nutrition in livestock production systems in developing countries: a critical review
- Gendered priority livestock species and roles in small ruminant production
- Gender roles in ruminant disease management in Uganda: Implications for the control of peste des petits ruminants and Rift Valley fever
- Feed improvement to support intensification of ruminant production systems in the Ethiopian highlands
- Understanding gender roles in small ruminant health management in Ethiopia
- Gender roles in ruminant disease management in Uganda and implications for control of peste des petits ruminants and Rift Valley fever
Autor: Tangka, F.K.L.
- Crossbred cows and food security in Ethiopia
- Women and the sustainable development of market-oriented dairying: evidence from the highlands of East Africa
- Gender roles and child nutrition in livestock production systems in developing countries: a critical review
- Implications of feed scarcity for gender roles in ruminant livestock production
- Food security effects of intensified dairying: Evidence from the Ethiopian highlands
- Economic and nutritional impacts of market-oriented dairy production in the Ethiopian highlands
Autor: Jabbar, M.A.
- Low cost animal drawn implements for Vertisol management and strategies for land use intensification
- Voluntary intake by sheep and goats of Gliricidia sepium fed in three states and at three levels of supplementation to a basal diet of Panicum maximum
- Adoption pathways for new agricultural technologies: An approach and an application to Vertisol management technology in Ethiopia
- LPA Brief no. 10. The role of credit in the uptake and productivity of improved dairy technologies in sub-Saharan Africa
- Performance of minimum tillage with animal drawn implements on Vertisols in Ethiopia
- Benefits and costs of compliance of sanitary regulations in livestock markets: The case of Rift Valley Fever in the Somali Region of Ethiopia in livestock markets: the case of Rift Valley fever in the Somali region of Ethiopia