Land degradation and intensified livestock and crop production in the Ethiopian highlands

The Ethiopian highlands are ecologically heterogenous and densely populated by humans and animals. Due to the high human population pressure and large herds of livestock on small farm areas, continuous overgrazing of natural grasslands is common. In attempts to meet the increasing food and feed dema...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mohamed-Saleem, M.A., Mwendera, E.J.
Format: Conference Paper
Language:Inglés
Published: South African Society of Animal Science 1996
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/50773
_version_ 1855541307661877248
author Mohamed-Saleem, M.A.
Mwendera, E.J.
author_browse Mohamed-Saleem, M.A.
Mwendera, E.J.
author_facet Mohamed-Saleem, M.A.
Mwendera, E.J.
author_sort Mohamed-Saleem, M.A.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The Ethiopian highlands are ecologically heterogenous and densely populated by humans and animals. Due to the high human population pressure and large herds of livestock on small farm areas, continuous overgrazing of natural grasslands is common. In attempts to meet the increasing food and feed demands of large human and livestock populations, respectively, farmers are cultivating more land permanently, grazing lands have been encroached and many traditional farming systems have broken down. Apart from keeping a mix of animals, particularly oxen to supply farm power requirements, farmers in the highlands cultivate a complex mix of crops for subsistence. ILRI's collaborative research with national partners, NGOs and other IARCs in the Ethiopian highlands has focussed on generating environmentally safe technologies for improving the welfare of resource-poor smallholder farmers who depend on crop-livestock production systems across the fragile highland ecologies of East Africa.
format Conference Paper
id CGSpace50773
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 1996
publishDateRange 1996
publishDateSort 1996
publisher South African Society of Animal Science
publisherStr South African Society of Animal Science
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace507732023-02-15T09:44:18Z Land degradation and intensified livestock and crop production in the Ethiopian highlands Mohamed-Saleem, M.A. Mwendera, E.J. highlands mixed farming environmental degradation The Ethiopian highlands are ecologically heterogenous and densely populated by humans and animals. Due to the high human population pressure and large herds of livestock on small farm areas, continuous overgrazing of natural grasslands is common. In attempts to meet the increasing food and feed demands of large human and livestock populations, respectively, farmers are cultivating more land permanently, grazing lands have been encroached and many traditional farming systems have broken down. Apart from keeping a mix of animals, particularly oxen to supply farm power requirements, farmers in the highlands cultivate a complex mix of crops for subsistence. ILRI's collaborative research with national partners, NGOs and other IARCs in the Ethiopian highlands has focussed on generating environmentally safe technologies for improving the welfare of resource-poor smallholder farmers who depend on crop-livestock production systems across the fragile highland ecologies of East Africa. 1996 2014-10-31T06:21:38Z 2014-10-31T06:21:38Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/50773 en Limited Access South African Society of Animal Science
spellingShingle highlands
mixed farming
environmental degradation
Mohamed-Saleem, M.A.
Mwendera, E.J.
Land degradation and intensified livestock and crop production in the Ethiopian highlands
title Land degradation and intensified livestock and crop production in the Ethiopian highlands
title_full Land degradation and intensified livestock and crop production in the Ethiopian highlands
title_fullStr Land degradation and intensified livestock and crop production in the Ethiopian highlands
title_full_unstemmed Land degradation and intensified livestock and crop production in the Ethiopian highlands
title_short Land degradation and intensified livestock and crop production in the Ethiopian highlands
title_sort land degradation and intensified livestock and crop production in the ethiopian highlands
topic highlands
mixed farming
environmental degradation
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/50773
work_keys_str_mv AT mohamedsaleemma landdegradationandintensifiedlivestockandcropproductionintheethiopianhighlands
AT mwenderaej landdegradationandintensifiedlivestockandcropproductionintheethiopianhighlands