Contribution of integrated catchment and surface water management to livestock water productivity in pastoral production systems

Seasonal water fluctuations both in quality and quantity negatively affect livestock production and subsequently reduce livestock-water productivity (LWP) in rainfed pastoral production systems. This study aimed at assessing the effects of improved catchment and surface water management on LWP and t...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zziwa, Emmanuel, Mugerwa, S., Owoyesigire, B., Mpairwe, D.R.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/34268
_version_ 1855524415577522176
author Zziwa, Emmanuel
Mugerwa, S.
Owoyesigire, B.
Mpairwe, D.R.
author_browse Mpairwe, D.R.
Mugerwa, S.
Owoyesigire, B.
Zziwa, Emmanuel
author_facet Zziwa, Emmanuel
Mugerwa, S.
Owoyesigire, B.
Mpairwe, D.R.
author_sort Zziwa, Emmanuel
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Seasonal water fluctuations both in quality and quantity negatively affect livestock production and subsequently reduce livestock-water productivity (LWP) in rainfed pastoral production systems. This study aimed at assessing the effects of improved catchment and surface water management on LWP and to establish whether the effects of integrated catchment and surface water management are additive, synergistic or counteractive. Three pastoral production systems of Uganda (settled, semi - settled and non - settled) were considered under three management interventions (improved catchment management, improved surface water management and integrated catchment and surface water management) taking the base scenario as a control. Beneficial livestock outputs (p = 0.155), depleted water (p = 0.76) and LWP (p = 0.488) were not significantly different across production systems but were higher in settled and least in non - settled production systems. Improving catchment management increased LWP by 180%, 458 % and 142% while improving surface water management increased LWP by 62%, 165% and 60% in settled, semi - settled and non - settled production systems. Integrated catchment and surface water management increased LWP by 353%, 518% and 280% in settled, semi - sett led and non - settled production systems respectively. The effects of practicing integrated catchment and surface water management were hence synergistic and not additive. There exists a great potential for improving LWP in water stressed pastoral productio n systems of Uganda by reducing the amount of water depleted in production of animal products through practicing integrated catchment and surface water management interventions as well as increased utilization of crop residues in livestock feeding .
format Journal Article
id CGSpace34268
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2012
publishDateRange 2012
publishDateSort 2012
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace342682024-01-23T12:04:02Z Contribution of integrated catchment and surface water management to livestock water productivity in pastoral production systems Zziwa, Emmanuel Mugerwa, S. Owoyesigire, B. Mpairwe, D.R. livestock water Seasonal water fluctuations both in quality and quantity negatively affect livestock production and subsequently reduce livestock-water productivity (LWP) in rainfed pastoral production systems. This study aimed at assessing the effects of improved catchment and surface water management on LWP and to establish whether the effects of integrated catchment and surface water management are additive, synergistic or counteractive. Three pastoral production systems of Uganda (settled, semi - settled and non - settled) were considered under three management interventions (improved catchment management, improved surface water management and integrated catchment and surface water management) taking the base scenario as a control. Beneficial livestock outputs (p = 0.155), depleted water (p = 0.76) and LWP (p = 0.488) were not significantly different across production systems but were higher in settled and least in non - settled production systems. Improving catchment management increased LWP by 180%, 458 % and 142% while improving surface water management increased LWP by 62%, 165% and 60% in settled, semi - settled and non - settled production systems. Integrated catchment and surface water management increased LWP by 353%, 518% and 280% in settled, semi - sett led and non - settled production systems respectively. The effects of practicing integrated catchment and surface water management were hence synergistic and not additive. There exists a great potential for improving LWP in water stressed pastoral productio n systems of Uganda by reducing the amount of water depleted in production of animal products through practicing integrated catchment and surface water management interventions as well as increased utilization of crop residues in livestock feeding . 2012-05-30 2013-12-17T10:17:57Z 2013-12-17T10:17:57Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/34268 en Open Access Zziwa, E., Mugerwa, S., Owoyesigire, B. and Mpairwe, D. 2012. Contribution of integrated catchment and surface water management to livestock water productivity in pastoral production systems. International Journal of Biosciences 2(5): 52-60.
spellingShingle livestock
water
Zziwa, Emmanuel
Mugerwa, S.
Owoyesigire, B.
Mpairwe, D.R.
Contribution of integrated catchment and surface water management to livestock water productivity in pastoral production systems
title Contribution of integrated catchment and surface water management to livestock water productivity in pastoral production systems
title_full Contribution of integrated catchment and surface water management to livestock water productivity in pastoral production systems
title_fullStr Contribution of integrated catchment and surface water management to livestock water productivity in pastoral production systems
title_full_unstemmed Contribution of integrated catchment and surface water management to livestock water productivity in pastoral production systems
title_short Contribution of integrated catchment and surface water management to livestock water productivity in pastoral production systems
title_sort contribution of integrated catchment and surface water management to livestock water productivity in pastoral production systems
topic livestock
water
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/34268
work_keys_str_mv AT zziwaemmanuel contributionofintegratedcatchmentandsurfacewatermanagementtolivestockwaterproductivityinpastoralproductionsystems
AT mugerwas contributionofintegratedcatchmentandsurfacewatermanagementtolivestockwaterproductivityinpastoralproductionsystems
AT owoyesigireb contributionofintegratedcatchmentandsurfacewatermanagementtolivestockwaterproductivityinpastoralproductionsystems
AT mpairwedr contributionofintegratedcatchmentandsurfacewatermanagementtolivestockwaterproductivityinpastoralproductionsystems