Goat types of northern and western Ethiopia and Eritrea

Characterization is important in genetic resources conservation and utilization, but few information about indigenous livestock types are available. In the present study data from 22,934 goats were collected by a rapid survey method to characterize goats of Eritrea and northern and western Ethiopia....

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Autores principales: Rey, B., Peacock, C.P., Alemayehu, N., Banjaw, K.
Formato: Conference Paper
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Ethiopian Society of Animal Production 1995
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/50616
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author Rey, B.
Peacock, C.P.
Alemayehu, N.
Banjaw, K.
author_browse Alemayehu, N.
Banjaw, K.
Peacock, C.P.
Rey, B.
author_facet Rey, B.
Peacock, C.P.
Alemayehu, N.
Banjaw, K.
author_sort Rey, B.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Characterization is important in genetic resources conservation and utilization, but few information about indigenous livestock types are available. In the present study data from 22,934 goats were collected by a rapid survey method to characterize goats of Eritrea and northern and western Ethiopia. Nineteen morphological measurements were recorded for individual goats observed. This survey forms the last part of the national goat breed survey of Ethiopia and Eritrea, 1990-1993. Multivariate analyses were employed in the classification and the tracing of the ancestry of the indigenous goats. Eleven goat types were identified and three ancestral lines traced. The identified goat types were described according to the FAO (1986) standard descriptor lists. Management practices and the performances of these goat types were also assessed by information obtained from questionnaires. The highland of Ethiopia was found as a center of origin for the most goat types identified in the survey area. The primary base for the diversity of the goat types was agroclimatic variation. As a result body size and others qualitative characters were significantly affected by climatic factors to a place where the particular goat type adapted. Human selection breeding also contributed for the phenotypic variation of goat types. The high value of standard deviations in some of the measured variables for each goat type may indicate the still existing potential genotypic diversity. This could make the study region as the gene pool of the goat genotypes. Flock size, demographic structures and management problems were more related to the purpose of goat keeping and to the general farming systems.
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spelling CGSpace506162023-02-15T09:36:52Z Goat types of northern and western Ethiopia and Eritrea Rey, B. Peacock, C.P. Alemayehu, N. Banjaw, K. eritrea goats species biodiversity Characterization is important in genetic resources conservation and utilization, but few information about indigenous livestock types are available. In the present study data from 22,934 goats were collected by a rapid survey method to characterize goats of Eritrea and northern and western Ethiopia. Nineteen morphological measurements were recorded for individual goats observed. This survey forms the last part of the national goat breed survey of Ethiopia and Eritrea, 1990-1993. Multivariate analyses were employed in the classification and the tracing of the ancestry of the indigenous goats. Eleven goat types were identified and three ancestral lines traced. The identified goat types were described according to the FAO (1986) standard descriptor lists. Management practices and the performances of these goat types were also assessed by information obtained from questionnaires. The highland of Ethiopia was found as a center of origin for the most goat types identified in the survey area. The primary base for the diversity of the goat types was agroclimatic variation. As a result body size and others qualitative characters were significantly affected by climatic factors to a place where the particular goat type adapted. Human selection breeding also contributed for the phenotypic variation of goat types. The high value of standard deviations in some of the measured variables for each goat type may indicate the still existing potential genotypic diversity. This could make the study region as the gene pool of the goat genotypes. Flock size, demographic structures and management problems were more related to the purpose of goat keeping and to the general farming systems. 1995 2014-10-31T06:21:26Z 2014-10-31T06:21:26Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/50616 en Limited Access Ethiopian Society of Animal Production
spellingShingle eritrea
goats
species
biodiversity
Rey, B.
Peacock, C.P.
Alemayehu, N.
Banjaw, K.
Goat types of northern and western Ethiopia and Eritrea
title Goat types of northern and western Ethiopia and Eritrea
title_full Goat types of northern and western Ethiopia and Eritrea
title_fullStr Goat types of northern and western Ethiopia and Eritrea
title_full_unstemmed Goat types of northern and western Ethiopia and Eritrea
title_short Goat types of northern and western Ethiopia and Eritrea
title_sort goat types of northern and western ethiopia and eritrea
topic eritrea
goats
species
biodiversity
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/50616
work_keys_str_mv AT reyb goattypesofnorthernandwesternethiopiaanderitrea
AT peacockcp goattypesofnorthernandwesternethiopiaanderitrea
AT alemayehun goattypesofnorthernandwesternethiopiaanderitrea
AT banjawk goattypesofnorthernandwesternethiopiaanderitrea