Classification of donkey systems in Ethiopia

Working donkeys play a critical role in transportation, agriculture and household resilience in low- and middle-income countries. Other animals that are kept for production purposes, such as cattle, are often grouped into broad production system classes, such as dairy or pastoral, for comparison bet...

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Autores principales: Asteraye, Girma B., Jobling, R., Jemberu, Wudu T., Pinchbeck, G., Knight-Jones, Theodore J.D., Critchlow, R., Rushton, Jonathan, Chaters, G.L.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2026
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/177025
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author Asteraye, Girma B.
Jobling, R.
Jemberu, Wudu T.
Pinchbeck, G.
Knight-Jones, Theodore J.D.
Critchlow, R.
Rushton, Jonathan
Chaters, G.L.
author_browse Asteraye, Girma B.
Chaters, G.L.
Critchlow, R.
Jemberu, Wudu T.
Jobling, R.
Knight-Jones, Theodore J.D.
Pinchbeck, G.
Rushton, Jonathan
author_facet Asteraye, Girma B.
Jobling, R.
Jemberu, Wudu T.
Pinchbeck, G.
Knight-Jones, Theodore J.D.
Critchlow, R.
Rushton, Jonathan
Chaters, G.L.
author_sort Asteraye, Girma B.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Working donkeys play a critical role in transportation, agriculture and household resilience in low- and middle-income countries. Other animals that are kept for production purposes, such as cattle, are often grouped into broad production system classes, such as dairy or pastoral, for comparison between and better understanding of the needs and outputs of animals within specific sectors. Despite the importance of working donkeys for sustaining livelihoods there are no systematic classifications of these populations. The aim of this study was to classify and characterise donkey systems in Ethiopia using household-level questionnaire data which included donkey ownership, husbandry, use and local environment data, through multiple factor and hierarchical cluster analysis. Household questionnaire data from 241 donkey-owning households in three districts of Ethiopia were used. Three distinct clusters of donkey ownership were identified: ‘Domestic-Pastoral’; ‘Domestic-Agricultural’ and ‘Commercial’. Differences between systems are primarily influenced by donkey purpose, environmental (agro-ecological) factors, and husbandry practices. Constraints associated with donkey ownership varied across clusters: households in the commercial system reported higher incidence of injuries and welfare concerns, in the pastoral system the main constraints were drought and feed shortage, and domestic-agricultural households reported infectious diseases as the main challenge. This new classification of donkey systems provides a framework for analysing donkey health and welfare data, enabling more context-specific needs assessments and facilitating the design of targeted interventions to improve equid health and household livelihoods.
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spelling CGSpace1770252025-10-26T13:03:08Z Classification of donkey systems in Ethiopia Asteraye, Girma B. Jobling, R. Jemberu, Wudu T. Pinchbeck, G. Knight-Jones, Theodore J.D. Critchlow, R. Rushton, Jonathan Chaters, G.L. donkeys livestock Working donkeys play a critical role in transportation, agriculture and household resilience in low- and middle-income countries. Other animals that are kept for production purposes, such as cattle, are often grouped into broad production system classes, such as dairy or pastoral, for comparison between and better understanding of the needs and outputs of animals within specific sectors. Despite the importance of working donkeys for sustaining livelihoods there are no systematic classifications of these populations. The aim of this study was to classify and characterise donkey systems in Ethiopia using household-level questionnaire data which included donkey ownership, husbandry, use and local environment data, through multiple factor and hierarchical cluster analysis. Household questionnaire data from 241 donkey-owning households in three districts of Ethiopia were used. Three distinct clusters of donkey ownership were identified: ‘Domestic-Pastoral’; ‘Domestic-Agricultural’ and ‘Commercial’. Differences between systems are primarily influenced by donkey purpose, environmental (agro-ecological) factors, and husbandry practices. Constraints associated with donkey ownership varied across clusters: households in the commercial system reported higher incidence of injuries and welfare concerns, in the pastoral system the main constraints were drought and feed shortage, and domestic-agricultural households reported infectious diseases as the main challenge. This new classification of donkey systems provides a framework for analysing donkey health and welfare data, enabling more context-specific needs assessments and facilitating the design of targeted interventions to improve equid health and household livelihoods. 2026-01 2025-10-13T04:17:01Z 2025-10-13T04:17:01Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/177025 en Limited Access Elsevier Asteraye, G.B., Jobling, R., Jemberu, W.T., Pinchbeck, G., Knight-Jones, T.J.D., Critchlow, R., Rushton, J. and Chaters, G.L. 2026. Classification of donkey systems in Ethiopia. Preventive Veterinary Medicine 246: 106719.
spellingShingle donkeys
livestock
Asteraye, Girma B.
Jobling, R.
Jemberu, Wudu T.
Pinchbeck, G.
Knight-Jones, Theodore J.D.
Critchlow, R.
Rushton, Jonathan
Chaters, G.L.
Classification of donkey systems in Ethiopia
title Classification of donkey systems in Ethiopia
title_full Classification of donkey systems in Ethiopia
title_fullStr Classification of donkey systems in Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Classification of donkey systems in Ethiopia
title_short Classification of donkey systems in Ethiopia
title_sort classification of donkey systems in ethiopia
topic donkeys
livestock
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/177025
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