Evolving crop-livestock farming systems in the humid zone of West Africa

Cattle rearing in humid West Africa was nearly impossible in the past owing to the prevalence of trypanosomiasis. However in recent times, with population pressure, jungle clearance, crop cultivation and tsetse control measures, the challenge has been reduced. Consequently there has been an influx o...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jabbar, M.A.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: 1993
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/29319
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author Jabbar, M.A.
author_browse Jabbar, M.A.
author_facet Jabbar, M.A.
author_sort Jabbar, M.A.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Cattle rearing in humid West Africa was nearly impossible in the past owing to the prevalence of trypanosomiasis. However in recent times, with population pressure, jungle clearance, crop cultivation and tsetse control measures, the challenge has been reduced. Consequently there has been an influx of transhumant cattle rearers who used to visit the zone for dry season grazing and return to the safer sub-humid/semiarid zones in the wet season. An increasing number of them have begun to settle in the humid zone and are adopting crop-livestock mixed farming. There is also a tendency among some local crop farmers to adopt livestock gradually in the farming system. Consequently, new farming systems and its implications for systems oriented research by national and international centres are examined.
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spelling CGSpace293192022-01-29T16:03:25Z Evolving crop-livestock farming systems in the humid zone of West Africa Jabbar, M.A. humid zones mixed farming livestock plant production livestock population cropping patterns agropastoral systems farm size Cattle rearing in humid West Africa was nearly impossible in the past owing to the prevalence of trypanosomiasis. However in recent times, with population pressure, jungle clearance, crop cultivation and tsetse control measures, the challenge has been reduced. Consequently there has been an influx of transhumant cattle rearers who used to visit the zone for dry season grazing and return to the safer sub-humid/semiarid zones in the wet season. An increasing number of them have begun to settle in the humid zone and are adopting crop-livestock mixed farming. There is also a tendency among some local crop farmers to adopt livestock gradually in the farming system. Consequently, new farming systems and its implications for systems oriented research by national and international centres are examined. 1993 2013-06-11T09:23:10Z 2013-06-11T09:23:10Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/29319 en Limited Access Outlook on Agriculture;22(1): 13-21
spellingShingle humid zones
mixed farming
livestock
plant production
livestock population
cropping patterns
agropastoral systems
farm size
Jabbar, M.A.
Evolving crop-livestock farming systems in the humid zone of West Africa
title Evolving crop-livestock farming systems in the humid zone of West Africa
title_full Evolving crop-livestock farming systems in the humid zone of West Africa
title_fullStr Evolving crop-livestock farming systems in the humid zone of West Africa
title_full_unstemmed Evolving crop-livestock farming systems in the humid zone of West Africa
title_short Evolving crop-livestock farming systems in the humid zone of West Africa
title_sort evolving crop livestock farming systems in the humid zone of west africa
topic humid zones
mixed farming
livestock
plant production
livestock population
cropping patterns
agropastoral systems
farm size
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/29319
work_keys_str_mv AT jabbarma evolvingcroplivestockfarmingsystemsinthehumidzoneofwestafrica