Environmental and food security implications of livestock abortions and calf mortality: a case study in Kenya and Tanzania

This study investigates the environmental and food security implications of livestock abortions and calf mortality in Tanzanian dairy systems and Kenyan beef systems by utilizing data from previously published studies. The environmental impact of livestock abortion is assessed in Tanzanian dairy sys...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Gurmu, Endale B., Bronsvoort, B., Cook, Elizabeth A.J., Lankester, F., Özkan, Ş., Rosenstein, P.K., Semango, G., Wheelhouse, N., Wilkes, A., Arndt, Claudia
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Frontiers Media 2024
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/163153
_version_ 1855520830920851456
author Gurmu, Endale B.
Bronsvoort, B.
Cook, Elizabeth A.J.
Lankester, F.
Özkan, Ş.
Rosenstein, P.K.
Semango, G.
Wheelhouse, N.
Wilkes, A.
Arndt, Claudia
author_browse Arndt, Claudia
Bronsvoort, B.
Cook, Elizabeth A.J.
Gurmu, Endale B.
Lankester, F.
Rosenstein, P.K.
Semango, G.
Wheelhouse, N.
Wilkes, A.
Özkan, Ş.
author_facet Gurmu, Endale B.
Bronsvoort, B.
Cook, Elizabeth A.J.
Lankester, F.
Özkan, Ş.
Rosenstein, P.K.
Semango, G.
Wheelhouse, N.
Wilkes, A.
Arndt, Claudia
author_sort Gurmu, Endale B.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description This study investigates the environmental and food security implications of livestock abortions and calf mortality in Tanzanian dairy systems and Kenyan beef systems by utilizing data from previously published studies. The environmental impact of livestock abortion is assessed in Tanzanian dairy systems, examining indigenous and exotic breeds of cattle and goats in Northern Tanzania. Calf mortality’s impact is evaluated in Kenyan beef systems, involving local cattle breeds in western Kenya. Greenhouse gas (GHG) emission intensity (EI) is estimated for both countries. The GHG emissions in Tanzania consider enteric fermentation, manure management, and feed production in different cattle and goat groups, as well as total milk production. In Kenya, enteric methane (CH4) EI related to calf mortality is assessed by estimating lifetime enteric CH4 emissions and total carcass production from dams and their offspring. The EI is compared between the observed scenario (16% calf mortality) and alternative scenarios (8, 4, and 0% calf mortality). A life cycle assessment using the Global Livestock Environmental Assessment Model-interactive (GLEAM-i) examines GHG sources and potential tradeoffs. Estimates are made for milk and carcass losses due to abortions and calf mortality, scaled to represent the entire country. Abortion increases milk EI by 4–18% in Tanzania, while Kenya’s EI ranges from 25.9 to 27.6 kg CO2 eq per kg carcass weight. Animal protein loss due to abortions is equivalent to the potential annual animal protein requirements of approximately 649 thousand people in Tanzania, while a 16% calf mortality rate in Kenya is equivalent to per capita consumption of 4.5 million people. The findings highlight the significant impact of abortions and calf mortality on GHG emissions and animal protein availability, emphasizing the potential for reduced emissions and improved food security through mitigation efforts. The contribution of emissions from enteric fermentation and manure management is significant across both countries, underscoring the importance of a systems perspective in evaluating the environmental impact of livestock production. This study provides insights into the environmental and food security implications of livestock abortions and calf mortality in Tanzania and Kenya, emphasizing the need for targeted interventions in sustainable livestock production.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace163153
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
publishDateSort 2024
publisher Frontiers Media
publisherStr Frontiers Media
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1631532025-12-08T10:29:22Z Environmental and food security implications of livestock abortions and calf mortality: a case study in Kenya and Tanzania Gurmu, Endale B. Bronsvoort, B. Cook, Elizabeth A.J. Lankester, F. Özkan, Ş. Rosenstein, P.K. Semango, G. Wheelhouse, N. Wilkes, A. Arndt, Claudia cattle environment food security livestock This study investigates the environmental and food security implications of livestock abortions and calf mortality in Tanzanian dairy systems and Kenyan beef systems by utilizing data from previously published studies. The environmental impact of livestock abortion is assessed in Tanzanian dairy systems, examining indigenous and exotic breeds of cattle and goats in Northern Tanzania. Calf mortality’s impact is evaluated in Kenyan beef systems, involving local cattle breeds in western Kenya. Greenhouse gas (GHG) emission intensity (EI) is estimated for both countries. The GHG emissions in Tanzania consider enteric fermentation, manure management, and feed production in different cattle and goat groups, as well as total milk production. In Kenya, enteric methane (CH4) EI related to calf mortality is assessed by estimating lifetime enteric CH4 emissions and total carcass production from dams and their offspring. The EI is compared between the observed scenario (16% calf mortality) and alternative scenarios (8, 4, and 0% calf mortality). A life cycle assessment using the Global Livestock Environmental Assessment Model-interactive (GLEAM-i) examines GHG sources and potential tradeoffs. Estimates are made for milk and carcass losses due to abortions and calf mortality, scaled to represent the entire country. Abortion increases milk EI by 4–18% in Tanzania, while Kenya’s EI ranges from 25.9 to 27.6 kg CO2 eq per kg carcass weight. Animal protein loss due to abortions is equivalent to the potential annual animal protein requirements of approximately 649 thousand people in Tanzania, while a 16% calf mortality rate in Kenya is equivalent to per capita consumption of 4.5 million people. The findings highlight the significant impact of abortions and calf mortality on GHG emissions and animal protein availability, emphasizing the potential for reduced emissions and improved food security through mitigation efforts. The contribution of emissions from enteric fermentation and manure management is significant across both countries, underscoring the importance of a systems perspective in evaluating the environmental impact of livestock production. This study provides insights into the environmental and food security implications of livestock abortions and calf mortality in Tanzania and Kenya, emphasizing the need for targeted interventions in sustainable livestock production. 2024-11-28 2024-12-06T11:01:18Z 2024-12-06T11:01:18Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/163153 en Open Access Frontiers Media Gurmu, E.B., Bronsvoort, B., Cook, E.A.J., Lankester, F., Özkan, Ş., Rosenstein, P.K., Semango, G., Wheelhouse, N., Wilkes, A. and Arndt, C. 2024. Environmental and food security implications of livestock abortions and calf mortality: a case study in Kenya and Tanzania. Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems 8: 1390047.
spellingShingle cattle
environment
food security
livestock
Gurmu, Endale B.
Bronsvoort, B.
Cook, Elizabeth A.J.
Lankester, F.
Özkan, Ş.
Rosenstein, P.K.
Semango, G.
Wheelhouse, N.
Wilkes, A.
Arndt, Claudia
Environmental and food security implications of livestock abortions and calf mortality: a case study in Kenya and Tanzania
title Environmental and food security implications of livestock abortions and calf mortality: a case study in Kenya and Tanzania
title_full Environmental and food security implications of livestock abortions and calf mortality: a case study in Kenya and Tanzania
title_fullStr Environmental and food security implications of livestock abortions and calf mortality: a case study in Kenya and Tanzania
title_full_unstemmed Environmental and food security implications of livestock abortions and calf mortality: a case study in Kenya and Tanzania
title_short Environmental and food security implications of livestock abortions and calf mortality: a case study in Kenya and Tanzania
title_sort environmental and food security implications of livestock abortions and calf mortality a case study in kenya and tanzania
topic cattle
environment
food security
livestock
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/163153
work_keys_str_mv AT gurmuendaleb environmentalandfoodsecurityimplicationsoflivestockabortionsandcalfmortalityacasestudyinkenyaandtanzania
AT bronsvoortb environmentalandfoodsecurityimplicationsoflivestockabortionsandcalfmortalityacasestudyinkenyaandtanzania
AT cookelizabethaj environmentalandfoodsecurityimplicationsoflivestockabortionsandcalfmortalityacasestudyinkenyaandtanzania
AT lankesterf environmentalandfoodsecurityimplicationsoflivestockabortionsandcalfmortalityacasestudyinkenyaandtanzania
AT ozkans environmentalandfoodsecurityimplicationsoflivestockabortionsandcalfmortalityacasestudyinkenyaandtanzania
AT rosensteinpk environmentalandfoodsecurityimplicationsoflivestockabortionsandcalfmortalityacasestudyinkenyaandtanzania
AT semangog environmentalandfoodsecurityimplicationsoflivestockabortionsandcalfmortalityacasestudyinkenyaandtanzania
AT wheelhousen environmentalandfoodsecurityimplicationsoflivestockabortionsandcalfmortalityacasestudyinkenyaandtanzania
AT wilkesa environmentalandfoodsecurityimplicationsoflivestockabortionsandcalfmortalityacasestudyinkenyaandtanzania
AT arndtclaudia environmentalandfoodsecurityimplicationsoflivestockabortionsandcalfmortalityacasestudyinkenyaandtanzania