Average daily gain of local pigs on rural and peri-urban smallholder farms in two districts of Western Kenya

The objective of this study was to determine the average daily gain (ADG) of pigs on rural and peri-urban smallholder farms in two districts of Western Kenya, in order to establish a baseline to measure the impact of future management interventions. Average daily gain (kilograms per day) for 664 pig...

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Autores principales: Carter, Natalie A., Dewey, Catherine E., Mutua, Florence K., Lange, C.F.M. de, Grace, Delia
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Springer 2013
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/27773
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author Carter, Natalie A.
Dewey, Catherine E.
Mutua, Florence K.
Lange, C.F.M. de
Grace, Delia
author_browse Carter, Natalie A.
Dewey, Catherine E.
Grace, Delia
Lange, C.F.M. de
Mutua, Florence K.
author_facet Carter, Natalie A.
Dewey, Catherine E.
Mutua, Florence K.
Lange, C.F.M. de
Grace, Delia
author_sort Carter, Natalie A.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The objective of this study was to determine the average daily gain (ADG) of pigs on rural and peri-urban smallholder farms in two districts of Western Kenya, in order to establish a baseline to measure the impact of future management interventions. Average daily gain (kilograms per day) for 664 pigs weighed one, two or three times and the proportion of local and crossbreed pigs was determined. Assuming a uniform birth weight of 1 kg, ADG did not differ between pigs weighed once or twice. Overall, ADG was higher in peri-urban pigs (0.15 ± 0.058 kg/day) than rural pigs (0.11 ± 0.047 kg/day). Pigs at 1 to 2 months had a higher ADG than those at 3 months or 10 to 12 months and ADG was higher in crossbreed than local pigs. Over the two districts, the ADG was low (0.13 ± 0.002 kg/day). Most (87.2 %) pigs were of local breed. Low ADG may be due to malnourishment, high maintenance energy expenditure, high parasite prevalence, disease, and/or low genetic potential. This low ADG of pigs raised on smallholder farms in Western Kenya indicates a high potential for improvement. The growth rate of pigs in Western Kenya must be improved using locally available feedstuffs to make efficient use of resources, promote sustainable smallholder pig production, and improve the livelihood of smallholder farmers.
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spelling CGSpace277732024-03-06T10:16:43Z Average daily gain of local pigs on rural and peri-urban smallholder farms in two districts of Western Kenya Carter, Natalie A. Dewey, Catherine E. Mutua, Florence K. Lange, C.F.M. de Grace, Delia The objective of this study was to determine the average daily gain (ADG) of pigs on rural and peri-urban smallholder farms in two districts of Western Kenya, in order to establish a baseline to measure the impact of future management interventions. Average daily gain (kilograms per day) for 664 pigs weighed one, two or three times and the proportion of local and crossbreed pigs was determined. Assuming a uniform birth weight of 1 kg, ADG did not differ between pigs weighed once or twice. Overall, ADG was higher in peri-urban pigs (0.15 ± 0.058 kg/day) than rural pigs (0.11 ± 0.047 kg/day). Pigs at 1 to 2 months had a higher ADG than those at 3 months or 10 to 12 months and ADG was higher in crossbreed than local pigs. Over the two districts, the ADG was low (0.13 ± 0.002 kg/day). Most (87.2 %) pigs were of local breed. Low ADG may be due to malnourishment, high maintenance energy expenditure, high parasite prevalence, disease, and/or low genetic potential. This low ADG of pigs raised on smallholder farms in Western Kenya indicates a high potential for improvement. The growth rate of pigs in Western Kenya must be improved using locally available feedstuffs to make efficient use of resources, promote sustainable smallholder pig production, and improve the livelihood of smallholder farmers. 2013-10 2013-03-27T17:08:54Z 2013-03-27T17:08:54Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/27773 en Limited Access Springer Carter, N., Dewey, C., Mutua, F., Lange, C. de. and Grace, D. 2013. Average daily gain of local pigs on rural and peri-urban smallholder farms in two districts of Western Kenya. Tropical Animal Health and Production 45(7): 1533-1538
spellingShingle Carter, Natalie A.
Dewey, Catherine E.
Mutua, Florence K.
Lange, C.F.M. de
Grace, Delia
Average daily gain of local pigs on rural and peri-urban smallholder farms in two districts of Western Kenya
title Average daily gain of local pigs on rural and peri-urban smallholder farms in two districts of Western Kenya
title_full Average daily gain of local pigs on rural and peri-urban smallholder farms in two districts of Western Kenya
title_fullStr Average daily gain of local pigs on rural and peri-urban smallholder farms in two districts of Western Kenya
title_full_unstemmed Average daily gain of local pigs on rural and peri-urban smallholder farms in two districts of Western Kenya
title_short Average daily gain of local pigs on rural and peri-urban smallholder farms in two districts of Western Kenya
title_sort average daily gain of local pigs on rural and peri urban smallholder farms in two districts of western kenya
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/27773
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