Behavioural compensation for limited grazing time by herded cattle in central Nigeria

The grazing behaviour in 12 cattle herds (mean size 45 head) mainly of the Banaji (White Fulani) breed kept by Fulani pastoralists was studied by analysing the diurnal pattern of grazing activity during 5 herd-days per month over 1 year. Herding restricted animal access to pasture to only 8.4 h/day...

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Main Author: Bayer, W.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Elsevier 1990
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/28357
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author Bayer, W.
author_browse Bayer, W.
author_facet Bayer, W.
author_sort Bayer, W.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The grazing behaviour in 12 cattle herds (mean size 45 head) mainly of the Banaji (White Fulani) breed kept by Fulani pastoralists was studied by analysing the diurnal pattern of grazing activity during 5 herd-days per month over 1 year. Herding restricted animal access to pasture to only 8.4 h/day as an annual average. The herding period was longest ( 10.5 h) in the transition from dry to wet season and shortest ( 7 h) in the late wet season. The peaks in grazing activity in free-ranging herbivores were not evident in the herded cattle, whose grazing activity remained high throughout the herding day. Resting, including ruminating, accounted for only 5 percent of herding time. Other studies of restricted grazing by African cattle showed a reduction in animal production only if forage was scarce or of low quality. The Fulani herds had access to a variety of grazing resources throughout the year. Any possible limitation in animal production due to restricted grazing time must be seen in the wider context of the land-use system, in which the Fulani herding practices permit an integration of cropping and livestock husbandry.
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spelling CGSpace283572024-05-01T08:20:09Z Behavioural compensation for limited grazing time by herded cattle in central Nigeria Bayer, W. cattle grazing behaviour The grazing behaviour in 12 cattle herds (mean size 45 head) mainly of the Banaji (White Fulani) breed kept by Fulani pastoralists was studied by analysing the diurnal pattern of grazing activity during 5 herd-days per month over 1 year. Herding restricted animal access to pasture to only 8.4 h/day as an annual average. The herding period was longest ( 10.5 h) in the transition from dry to wet season and shortest ( 7 h) in the late wet season. The peaks in grazing activity in free-ranging herbivores were not evident in the herded cattle, whose grazing activity remained high throughout the herding day. Resting, including ruminating, accounted for only 5 percent of herding time. Other studies of restricted grazing by African cattle showed a reduction in animal production only if forage was scarce or of low quality. The Fulani herds had access to a variety of grazing resources throughout the year. Any possible limitation in animal production due to restricted grazing time must be seen in the wider context of the land-use system, in which the Fulani herding practices permit an integration of cropping and livestock husbandry. 1990-08 2013-05-06T07:00:27Z 2013-05-06T07:00:27Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/28357 en Limited Access Elsevier Applied Animal Behaviour Science;27(1-2): 9-19
spellingShingle cattle
grazing behaviour
Bayer, W.
Behavioural compensation for limited grazing time by herded cattle in central Nigeria
title Behavioural compensation for limited grazing time by herded cattle in central Nigeria
title_full Behavioural compensation for limited grazing time by herded cattle in central Nigeria
title_fullStr Behavioural compensation for limited grazing time by herded cattle in central Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Behavioural compensation for limited grazing time by herded cattle in central Nigeria
title_short Behavioural compensation for limited grazing time by herded cattle in central Nigeria
title_sort behavioural compensation for limited grazing time by herded cattle in central nigeria
topic cattle
grazing behaviour
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/28357
work_keys_str_mv AT bayerw behaviouralcompensationforlimitedgrazingtimebyherdedcattleincentralnigeria