The challenge of conserving indigenous domesticated animals

This special issue contains many valuable studies of indigenous domesticated animal genetic resources. Individual farmers throughout the world are abandoning many breeds that have been locally adapted over thousands of years in favor of new exotic but more productive breeds. Economics can explain so...

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Autor principal: Mendelsohn, R.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2003
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/3678
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author Mendelsohn, R.
author_browse Mendelsohn, R.
author_facet Mendelsohn, R.
author_sort Mendelsohn, R.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description This special issue contains many valuable studies of indigenous domesticated animal genetic resources. Individual farmers throughout the world are abandoning many breeds that have been locally adapted over thousands of years in favor of new exotic but more productive breeds. Economics can explain some of this transition as cheaper grains and modem genetic tools have made more intensive husbandry more profitable. Poorly designed government policies may have contributed to the decline as well. The general decline of indigenous species especially in developing countries raises many conservation issues. What role should local breeds continue to have in local economies? Is there a social argument such as keeping historical livelihoods intact or keeping genetic diversity intact for government programs to maintain economically inferior breeds? What is the most efficient design for animal conservation programs?
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spelling CGSpace36782024-08-27T10:35:49Z The challenge of conserving indigenous domesticated animals Mendelsohn, R. This special issue contains many valuable studies of indigenous domesticated animal genetic resources. Individual farmers throughout the world are abandoning many breeds that have been locally adapted over thousands of years in favor of new exotic but more productive breeds. Economics can explain some of this transition as cheaper grains and modem genetic tools have made more intensive husbandry more profitable. Poorly designed government policies may have contributed to the decline as well. The general decline of indigenous species especially in developing countries raises many conservation issues. What role should local breeds continue to have in local economies? Is there a social argument such as keeping historical livelihoods intact or keeping genetic diversity intact for government programs to maintain economically inferior breeds? What is the most efficient design for animal conservation programs? 2003-07 2011-05-17T19:18:41Z 2011-05-17T19:18:41Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/3678 en Limited Access Elsevier Mendelsohn, R. 2003. The challenge of conserving indigenous domesticated animals. Ecological Economics 45(3):501-510.
spellingShingle Mendelsohn, R.
The challenge of conserving indigenous domesticated animals
title The challenge of conserving indigenous domesticated animals
title_full The challenge of conserving indigenous domesticated animals
title_fullStr The challenge of conserving indigenous domesticated animals
title_full_unstemmed The challenge of conserving indigenous domesticated animals
title_short The challenge of conserving indigenous domesticated animals
title_sort challenge of conserving indigenous domesticated animals
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/3678
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