Economic benefits to farmers of six years of application of an insecticidal 'pour-on' to control tsetse in Ghibe, southwest Ethiopia

A tsetse control campaign using an insecticidal cypermethrin "pour-on" applied monthly to village Zebu cattle in Ghibe in southwest Ethiopia has been in operation for over six years. For four of these years farmers have paid a cost-recovery price for each animal given treatment. Relative densities o...

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Main Authors: Mulatu, W., Swallow, B.M., Rowlands, G.J., Leak, S.G.A., D'Ieteren, G.D.M., Nagda, S.M.
Format: Conference Paper
Language:Inglés
Published: OAU/STRC 1999
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/50417
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author Mulatu, W.
Swallow, B.M.
Rowlands, G.J.
Leak, S.G.A.
D'Ieteren, G.D.M.
Nagda, S.M.
author_browse D'Ieteren, G.D.M.
Leak, S.G.A.
Mulatu, W.
Nagda, S.M.
Rowlands, G.J.
Swallow, B.M.
author_facet Mulatu, W.
Swallow, B.M.
Rowlands, G.J.
Leak, S.G.A.
D'Ieteren, G.D.M.
Nagda, S.M.
author_sort Mulatu, W.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description A tsetse control campaign using an insecticidal cypermethrin "pour-on" applied monthly to village Zebu cattle in Ghibe in southwest Ethiopia has been in operation for over six years. For four of these years farmers have paid a cost-recovery price for each animal given treatment. Relative densities of tsetse and biting flies fell by 95 percent during the second year of vector control. Despite very high levels of drug resistance, trypanosomal prevalence in adult cattle has been reduced from 41 percent to 16 percent (a reduction of 61 percent) and the number of curative trypanocidal treatments per animal has been reduced by 50 percent. A 57 percent reduction in abortion rate and calf mortality, a 49 percent increase in calf/cow ratio and an 8 percent increase in adult male body weight occurred as a result of tsetse control. Before tsetse control intervention there were fewer than 500 cattle in the area; now, six years later, up to 6500 cattle may be brought for 'pour-on' treatment in a month. The reduced expenditures on trypanocidal drugs more than offset the cost of the pour-on. The additional benefits of increased output of meat (41 percent) and milk (39 percent) led to an overall benefit/cost ratio of 8:1 spread over five years. Two thirds of households own cattle (one third with 1-3 cattle and one third with between 4 and 56 cattle). When the above net benefits are expressed in terms of average household income they represent increases in annual income of between 10 and 34 percent household.
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spelling CGSpace504172021-02-23T22:16:31Z Economic benefits to farmers of six years of application of an insecticidal 'pour-on' to control tsetse in Ghibe, southwest Ethiopia Mulatu, W. Swallow, B.M. Rowlands, G.J. Leak, S.G.A. D'Ieteren, G.D.M. Nagda, S.M. glossinidae pest control insecticides economic value farmers livestock productivity trypanosomiasis cost benefit analysis A tsetse control campaign using an insecticidal cypermethrin "pour-on" applied monthly to village Zebu cattle in Ghibe in southwest Ethiopia has been in operation for over six years. For four of these years farmers have paid a cost-recovery price for each animal given treatment. Relative densities of tsetse and biting flies fell by 95 percent during the second year of vector control. Despite very high levels of drug resistance, trypanosomal prevalence in adult cattle has been reduced from 41 percent to 16 percent (a reduction of 61 percent) and the number of curative trypanocidal treatments per animal has been reduced by 50 percent. A 57 percent reduction in abortion rate and calf mortality, a 49 percent increase in calf/cow ratio and an 8 percent increase in adult male body weight occurred as a result of tsetse control. Before tsetse control intervention there were fewer than 500 cattle in the area; now, six years later, up to 6500 cattle may be brought for 'pour-on' treatment in a month. The reduced expenditures on trypanocidal drugs more than offset the cost of the pour-on. The additional benefits of increased output of meat (41 percent) and milk (39 percent) led to an overall benefit/cost ratio of 8:1 spread over five years. Two thirds of households own cattle (one third with 1-3 cattle and one third with between 4 and 56 cattle). When the above net benefits are expressed in terms of average household income they represent increases in annual income of between 10 and 34 percent household. 1999 2014-10-31T06:09:11Z 2014-10-31T06:09:11Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/50417 en Limited Access OAU/STRC
spellingShingle glossinidae
pest control
insecticides
economic value
farmers
livestock
productivity
trypanosomiasis
cost benefit analysis
Mulatu, W.
Swallow, B.M.
Rowlands, G.J.
Leak, S.G.A.
D'Ieteren, G.D.M.
Nagda, S.M.
Economic benefits to farmers of six years of application of an insecticidal 'pour-on' to control tsetse in Ghibe, southwest Ethiopia
title Economic benefits to farmers of six years of application of an insecticidal 'pour-on' to control tsetse in Ghibe, southwest Ethiopia
title_full Economic benefits to farmers of six years of application of an insecticidal 'pour-on' to control tsetse in Ghibe, southwest Ethiopia
title_fullStr Economic benefits to farmers of six years of application of an insecticidal 'pour-on' to control tsetse in Ghibe, southwest Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Economic benefits to farmers of six years of application of an insecticidal 'pour-on' to control tsetse in Ghibe, southwest Ethiopia
title_short Economic benefits to farmers of six years of application of an insecticidal 'pour-on' to control tsetse in Ghibe, southwest Ethiopia
title_sort economic benefits to farmers of six years of application of an insecticidal pour on to control tsetse in ghibe southwest ethiopia
topic glossinidae
pest control
insecticides
economic value
farmers
livestock
productivity
trypanosomiasis
cost benefit analysis
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/50417
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