Impact of Animal Health Interventions on Greenhouse Gas Emission and Adaptive Capacity of Extensive Livestock Systems in Ethiopia: A Narrative Review

Increasing concentration of greenhouse gases (GHGs), mainly of CH4, N2O and CO2, in the atmosphere is the most important cause of global warming. The agricultural sector is the dominant source of these gases in developing countries, including Ethiopia, and the livestock sub-sector accounts for 14.5%...

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Main Authors: Demis, Chekol, Dagnachew, Shimelis, Fentie, Tsegaw, Mekuriaw, Shigdaf, Van Dijk, Suzanne
Format: Informe técnico
Language:Inglés
Published: International Livestock Research Institute 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/174586
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author Demis, Chekol
Dagnachew, Shimelis
Fentie, Tsegaw
Mekuriaw, Shigdaf
Van Dijk, Suzanne
author_browse Dagnachew, Shimelis
Demis, Chekol
Fentie, Tsegaw
Mekuriaw, Shigdaf
Van Dijk, Suzanne
author_facet Demis, Chekol
Dagnachew, Shimelis
Fentie, Tsegaw
Mekuriaw, Shigdaf
Van Dijk, Suzanne
author_sort Demis, Chekol
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Increasing concentration of greenhouse gases (GHGs), mainly of CH4, N2O and CO2, in the atmosphere is the most important cause of global warming. The agricultural sector is the dominant source of these gases in developing countries, including Ethiopia, and the livestock sub-sector accounts for 14.5% of all anthropogenic GHG and 80% of all emissions from the sector. This is mainly due to the environmental impacts of livestock diseases through increased emission of GHGs from diseased and non-productive animals to the atmosphere, which challenges the adaptive capacity of livestock keepers. Animal health interventions thus can significantly reduce emissions and enhance the adaptive capacity of livestock keepers. Despite this, little attention is given to the impact of animal health interventions on reducing GHG emissions and improvements in adaptive capacity of livestock keepers, and no previous research in Ethiopia has documented such impacts yet. With that, this narrative review is written to assess the effects of animal health interventions on GHG emissions and the adaptive capacity of livestock keepers against the negative stimuli and impacts of climate change in Ethiopia. Emissions of GHGs from livestock can be reduced through effective management of production-limiting disease, as indicated in the finding that every 1% increase in parasitic worms in sheep results in a 0.52% increase in emissions. Growing lambs infected with parasitic worms were found to have 33% higher methane emissions per kg dry matter intake than their healthy counterparts. In addition, infected lambs were also found to gain weight at only 4% of the rate of healthy lambs, resulting in a delayed time to reach slaughter weight and thus greater lifetime methane production. Strategic animal health interventions in grazing lambs shorten the time to reach market weight and reduce GHG emissions per kg of live weight gain by 10%. Healthy livestock have higher productivity and less variable production than diseased livestock, giving the farmer higher and more stable returns. They also increase the availability of foods of animal origin and hence improve the livelihood and adaptive capacity of livestock keepers. These evidences signify the “two birds in one stone” type role of animal health interventions in the sense that they can reduce GHG emissions from livestock farming and at the same time enhance the adaptive capacity of livestock keepers. Hence, it is critical to incorporate animal health interventions in future government policies and programs related to climate change and adaptive capacity.
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spelling CGSpace1745862025-12-08T09:54:28Z Impact of Animal Health Interventions on Greenhouse Gas Emission and Adaptive Capacity of Extensive Livestock Systems in Ethiopia: A Narrative Review Demis, Chekol Dagnachew, Shimelis Fentie, Tsegaw Mekuriaw, Shigdaf Van Dijk, Suzanne animal health greenhouse gas emissions Increasing concentration of greenhouse gases (GHGs), mainly of CH4, N2O and CO2, in the atmosphere is the most important cause of global warming. The agricultural sector is the dominant source of these gases in developing countries, including Ethiopia, and the livestock sub-sector accounts for 14.5% of all anthropogenic GHG and 80% of all emissions from the sector. This is mainly due to the environmental impacts of livestock diseases through increased emission of GHGs from diseased and non-productive animals to the atmosphere, which challenges the adaptive capacity of livestock keepers. Animal health interventions thus can significantly reduce emissions and enhance the adaptive capacity of livestock keepers. Despite this, little attention is given to the impact of animal health interventions on reducing GHG emissions and improvements in adaptive capacity of livestock keepers, and no previous research in Ethiopia has documented such impacts yet. With that, this narrative review is written to assess the effects of animal health interventions on GHG emissions and the adaptive capacity of livestock keepers against the negative stimuli and impacts of climate change in Ethiopia. Emissions of GHGs from livestock can be reduced through effective management of production-limiting disease, as indicated in the finding that every 1% increase in parasitic worms in sheep results in a 0.52% increase in emissions. Growing lambs infected with parasitic worms were found to have 33% higher methane emissions per kg dry matter intake than their healthy counterparts. In addition, infected lambs were also found to gain weight at only 4% of the rate of healthy lambs, resulting in a delayed time to reach slaughter weight and thus greater lifetime methane production. Strategic animal health interventions in grazing lambs shorten the time to reach market weight and reduce GHG emissions per kg of live weight gain by 10%. Healthy livestock have higher productivity and less variable production than diseased livestock, giving the farmer higher and more stable returns. They also increase the availability of foods of animal origin and hence improve the livelihood and adaptive capacity of livestock keepers. These evidences signify the “two birds in one stone” type role of animal health interventions in the sense that they can reduce GHG emissions from livestock farming and at the same time enhance the adaptive capacity of livestock keepers. Hence, it is critical to incorporate animal health interventions in future government policies and programs related to climate change and adaptive capacity. 2025-04-30 2025-05-14T12:39:49Z 2025-05-14T12:39:49Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/174586 en Open Access application/pdf International Livestock Research Institute Demis, C., Dagnachew, S., Fentie, T., Mekuriaw, S., Van Dijk, S. and Makonnen, B. 2025. Impact of Animal Health Interventions on Greenhouse Gas Emission and Adaptive Capacity of Extensive Livestock Systems in Ethiopia: A Narrative Review. Strengthening Adaptive Capacity of Extensive Livestock Systems for Food and Nutrition Security and Low-emissions Development in Eastern and Southern Africa’ Project. ACIAR Reports. Nairobi, Kenya: ILRI.
spellingShingle animal health
greenhouse gas emissions
Demis, Chekol
Dagnachew, Shimelis
Fentie, Tsegaw
Mekuriaw, Shigdaf
Van Dijk, Suzanne
Impact of Animal Health Interventions on Greenhouse Gas Emission and Adaptive Capacity of Extensive Livestock Systems in Ethiopia: A Narrative Review
title Impact of Animal Health Interventions on Greenhouse Gas Emission and Adaptive Capacity of Extensive Livestock Systems in Ethiopia: A Narrative Review
title_full Impact of Animal Health Interventions on Greenhouse Gas Emission and Adaptive Capacity of Extensive Livestock Systems in Ethiopia: A Narrative Review
title_fullStr Impact of Animal Health Interventions on Greenhouse Gas Emission and Adaptive Capacity of Extensive Livestock Systems in Ethiopia: A Narrative Review
title_full_unstemmed Impact of Animal Health Interventions on Greenhouse Gas Emission and Adaptive Capacity of Extensive Livestock Systems in Ethiopia: A Narrative Review
title_short Impact of Animal Health Interventions on Greenhouse Gas Emission and Adaptive Capacity of Extensive Livestock Systems in Ethiopia: A Narrative Review
title_sort impact of animal health interventions on greenhouse gas emission and adaptive capacity of extensive livestock systems in ethiopia a narrative review
topic animal health
greenhouse gas emissions
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/174586
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