Low input cattle production systems in tropical Africa: An analysis of actual and potential cow-calf productivity

The biological productivity of cow-calf units in low-input production systems in tropical Africa is reviewed. Four production systems (pastoralists agropastoralists, crop-livestock farmers and smallholder farmers) are identified. Fifty-five data sets from monitoring and systems research conducted by...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Leeuw, P.N. de, Thorpe, W.R.
Format: Conference Paper
Language:Inglés
Published: South African Society of Animal Science 1996
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/50815
_version_ 1855522981993775104
author Leeuw, P.N. de
Thorpe, W.R.
author_browse Leeuw, P.N. de
Thorpe, W.R.
author_facet Leeuw, P.N. de
Thorpe, W.R.
author_sort Leeuw, P.N. de
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The biological productivity of cow-calf units in low-input production systems in tropical Africa is reviewed. Four production systems (pastoralists agropastoralists, crop-livestock farmers and smallholder farmers) are identified. Fifty-five data sets from monitoring and systems research conducted by ILCA and from other secondary sources are analysed to detect interactions between performance variables including calving rate, cow and calf mortality, milk offtake and calf growth, and relate these to factors of environment, mangement and producer goals. Through equating 1 kg of calf weight to 9 kg of milk offtake, the index kg liveweight/100 kg cow/yr is used to compare systems that vary in production goals and breeds. In low-input traditional systems cow productivity is constrained by disease and seasonal shortages of breed and water, cows produce at sub-optimal, level. To access this depression the indices from traditional systems are compared with those of indigenous cows raised in ranches and research stations. Zebus and Sanga in the semi-arid and subhumid zone produced between 15 and 25 kg/100 kg cow/yr, the proportions of low and high-yielding herds being similar. Trypanotorant cows in the sub-humid zone were relatively high-yielding (up to 30 kg) due to high extraction rates, suggesting that increased milk offtake may enchance overlal productivity. The majority of indigenous cows in ranches and research stations produced a weaned calf weight of 33-38 kg/100 kg cow or on average 75 percent more than cows in traditional systems. Further analyses are required to substantiate that high milk offtake increases overall productivity, at least i the favourable environment of the subhumid zone. Price ratios between milk and liveweight averaged 1:3, explaining why milk offtake for sale has received high priority in many traditional production systems.
format Conference Paper
id CGSpace50815
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 CGSpace508152021-08-08T19:30:28Z Low input cattle production systems in tropical Africa: An analysis of actual and potential cow-calf productivity Leeuw, P.N. de Thorpe, W.R. tropical africa cattle production systems productivity The biological productivity of cow-calf units in low-input production systems in tropical Africa is reviewed. Four production systems (pastoralists agropastoralists, crop-livestock farmers and smallholder farmers) are identified. Fifty-five data sets from monitoring and systems research conducted by ILCA and from other secondary sources are analysed to detect interactions between performance variables including calving rate, cow and calf mortality, milk offtake and calf growth, and relate these to factors of environment, mangement and producer goals. Through equating 1 kg of calf weight to 9 kg of milk offtake, the index kg liveweight/100 kg cow/yr is used to compare systems that vary in production goals and breeds. In low-input traditional systems cow productivity is constrained by disease and seasonal shortages of breed and water, cows produce at sub-optimal, level. To access this depression the indices from traditional systems are compared with those of indigenous cows raised in ranches and research stations. Zebus and Sanga in the semi-arid and subhumid zone produced between 15 and 25 kg/100 kg cow/yr, the proportions of low and high-yielding herds being similar. Trypanotorant cows in the sub-humid zone were relatively high-yielding (up to 30 kg) due to high extraction rates, suggesting that increased milk offtake may enchance overlal productivity. The majority of indigenous cows in ranches and research stations produced a weaned calf weight of 33-38 kg/100 kg cow or on average 75 percent more than cows in traditional systems. Further analyses are required to substantiate that high milk offtake increases overall productivity, at least i the favourable environment of the subhumid zone. Price ratios between milk and liveweight averaged 1:3, explaining why milk offtake for sale has received high priority in many traditional production systems. 1996 2014-10-31T06:21:42Z 2014-10-31T06:21:42Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/50815 en Limited Access South African Society of Animal Science
spellingShingle tropical africa
cattle
production systems
productivity
Leeuw, P.N. de
Thorpe, W.R.
Low input cattle production systems in tropical Africa: An analysis of actual and potential cow-calf productivity
title Low input cattle production systems in tropical Africa: An analysis of actual and potential cow-calf productivity
title_full Low input cattle production systems in tropical Africa: An analysis of actual and potential cow-calf productivity
title_fullStr Low input cattle production systems in tropical Africa: An analysis of actual and potential cow-calf productivity
title_full_unstemmed Low input cattle production systems in tropical Africa: An analysis of actual and potential cow-calf productivity
title_short Low input cattle production systems in tropical Africa: An analysis of actual and potential cow-calf productivity
title_sort low input cattle production systems in tropical africa an analysis of actual and potential cow calf productivity
topic tropical africa
cattle
production systems
productivity
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/50815
work_keys_str_mv AT leeuwpnde lowinputcattleproductionsystemsintropicalafricaananalysisofactualandpotentialcowcalfproductivity
AT thorpewr lowinputcattleproductionsystemsintropicalafricaananalysisofactualandpotentialcowcalfproductivity