Promotion of improved Napier grass varieties, farmers field days and training on forage production and use in Ethiopia

Livestock is the major source of protein and substantially contributes to household food security in Ethiopia (Zeleke 2021). Once plentiful, natural pasture of the rangeland has supported the free grazing systems of livestock production in Ethiopia (Delasew et al. 2010). However, feed availability a...

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Autores principales: Negawo, Alemayehu T., Muktar, Meki S., Dejene, Mesfin, Mohammed, Kadir, Feyissa, Fekede, Jones, Christopher S.
Formato: Informe técnico
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Livestock Research Institute 2024
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/159450
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author Negawo, Alemayehu T.
Muktar, Meki S.
Dejene, Mesfin
Mohammed, Kadir
Feyissa, Fekede
Jones, Christopher S.
author_browse Dejene, Mesfin
Feyissa, Fekede
Jones, Christopher S.
Mohammed, Kadir
Muktar, Meki S.
Negawo, Alemayehu T.
author_facet Negawo, Alemayehu T.
Muktar, Meki S.
Dejene, Mesfin
Mohammed, Kadir
Feyissa, Fekede
Jones, Christopher S.
author_sort Negawo, Alemayehu T.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Livestock is the major source of protein and substantially contributes to household food security in Ethiopia (Zeleke 2021). Once plentiful, natural pasture of the rangeland has supported the free grazing systems of livestock production in Ethiopia (Delasew et al. 2010). However, feed availability and quality are among the factors that affect the production and productivity of livestock in sub-Saharan African (SSA) countries. Common grazing lands and harvested crop residues remain the main source of feed in SSA, which are available only during and after rainy seasons, and are now severely challenged by erratic rainfall conditions arising from climate change (Prieto-Garcia et al. 2022). Sources of feeds are increasingly limited to marginal lands as farmers give priority to food crops for cultivation. Forage production and use is not well known among smallholder farmers. As a result, it is crucial to develop an innovative strategy that looks beyond the traditional sources of feeds.
format Informe técnico
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institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
publishDateSort 2024
publisher International Livestock Research Institute
publisherStr International Livestock Research Institute
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spelling CGSpace1594502025-02-19T11:28:47Z Promotion of improved Napier grass varieties, farmers field days and training on forage production and use in Ethiopia Negawo, Alemayehu T. Muktar, Meki S. Dejene, Mesfin Mohammed, Kadir Feyissa, Fekede Jones, Christopher S. food security farmers forage grasses livestock Livestock is the major source of protein and substantially contributes to household food security in Ethiopia (Zeleke 2021). Once plentiful, natural pasture of the rangeland has supported the free grazing systems of livestock production in Ethiopia (Delasew et al. 2010). However, feed availability and quality are among the factors that affect the production and productivity of livestock in sub-Saharan African (SSA) countries. Common grazing lands and harvested crop residues remain the main source of feed in SSA, which are available only during and after rainy seasons, and are now severely challenged by erratic rainfall conditions arising from climate change (Prieto-Garcia et al. 2022). Sources of feeds are increasingly limited to marginal lands as farmers give priority to food crops for cultivation. Forage production and use is not well known among smallholder farmers. As a result, it is crucial to develop an innovative strategy that looks beyond the traditional sources of feeds. 2024-11-01 2024-11-08T16:31:15Z 2024-11-08T16:31:15Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/159450 en Open Access application/pdf International Livestock Research Institute Negawo, A.T., Muktar, M.S., Dejene, M., Mohammed, K., Feyissa, F. and Jones C.S. 2024. Promotion of improved Napier grass varieties, farmers field days and training on forage production and use in Ethiopia. Report. Nairobi, Kenya: ILRI.
spellingShingle food security
farmers
forage
grasses
livestock
Negawo, Alemayehu T.
Muktar, Meki S.
Dejene, Mesfin
Mohammed, Kadir
Feyissa, Fekede
Jones, Christopher S.
Promotion of improved Napier grass varieties, farmers field days and training on forage production and use in Ethiopia
title Promotion of improved Napier grass varieties, farmers field days and training on forage production and use in Ethiopia
title_full Promotion of improved Napier grass varieties, farmers field days and training on forage production and use in Ethiopia
title_fullStr Promotion of improved Napier grass varieties, farmers field days and training on forage production and use in Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Promotion of improved Napier grass varieties, farmers field days and training on forage production and use in Ethiopia
title_short Promotion of improved Napier grass varieties, farmers field days and training on forage production and use in Ethiopia
title_sort promotion of improved napier grass varieties farmers field days and training on forage production and use in ethiopia
topic food security
farmers
forage
grasses
livestock
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/159450
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