Productivity enhancement in animal production systems in Asia

The justification for productivity enhancement in animal production systems in Asia is discussed in the context of major economic changes and a changing external environment, and the inability of current systems of animal production to meet the human requirements of foods of animal origin. The situa...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Devendra, C.
Format: Conference Paper
Language:Inglés
Published: Society for the Advancement of Breeding Researches in Asia and Oceania 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/50980
_version_ 1855531907613196288
author Devendra, C.
author_browse Devendra, C.
author_facet Devendra, C.
author_sort Devendra, C.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The justification for productivity enhancement in animal production systems in Asia is discussed in the context of major economic changes and a changing external environment, and the inability of current systems of animal production to meet the human requirements of foods of animal origin. The situation is exacerbated by such factors as rapid population growth, urbanization, increased incomes, demand-led processes and changing consumer preferences. The projected total meat and milk requirement levels in 2020 are far in excess of anticipated supplies, and place unprecendented pressure on improved and integrated management of the natural resources (crops, animals, land and water). Enhancing productivity is therefore compelling, and will need to come from improved efficiency in the management of natural resources, increased per animal performance, appropriate animal production systems, and higher efficiency in the use of feed resources. Presently, the intensive, industrialized and private sector-led non-ruminant sector supplies the bulk of the meat and eggs for human consumption. By comparison, ruminant production systems have lagged behind in productivity because of inadequate technology application and participation of resource poor small farmers. Since arable land is limited and existing irrigated land are overused, the potentially important rainfed lands will become increasingly important to productivity enhancement in the future. Increased research investments are necessary that can specifically focus on these environments, backed by strong systems research approach, interdisciplinary and holistic approach. These together can significantly benefit both producers and consumers, promote improved livelihoods for the poorest of the poor, agricultural growth and environmental sustainability.
format Conference Paper
id CGSpace50980
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2001
publishDateRange 2001
publishDateSort 2001
publisher Society for the Advancement of Breeding Researches in Asia and Oceania
publisherStr Society for the Advancement of Breeding Researches in Asia and Oceania
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace509802016-05-30T17:53:17Z Productivity enhancement in animal production systems in Asia Devendra, C. animal production productivity economics environment The justification for productivity enhancement in animal production systems in Asia is discussed in the context of major economic changes and a changing external environment, and the inability of current systems of animal production to meet the human requirements of foods of animal origin. The situation is exacerbated by such factors as rapid population growth, urbanization, increased incomes, demand-led processes and changing consumer preferences. The projected total meat and milk requirement levels in 2020 are far in excess of anticipated supplies, and place unprecendented pressure on improved and integrated management of the natural resources (crops, animals, land and water). Enhancing productivity is therefore compelling, and will need to come from improved efficiency in the management of natural resources, increased per animal performance, appropriate animal production systems, and higher efficiency in the use of feed resources. Presently, the intensive, industrialized and private sector-led non-ruminant sector supplies the bulk of the meat and eggs for human consumption. By comparison, ruminant production systems have lagged behind in productivity because of inadequate technology application and participation of resource poor small farmers. Since arable land is limited and existing irrigated land are overused, the potentially important rainfed lands will become increasingly important to productivity enhancement in the future. Increased research investments are necessary that can specifically focus on these environments, backed by strong systems research approach, interdisciplinary and holistic approach. These together can significantly benefit both producers and consumers, promote improved livelihoods for the poorest of the poor, agricultural growth and environmental sustainability. 2001 2014-10-31T06:21:54Z 2014-10-31T06:21:54Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/50980 en Limited Access Society for the Advancement of Breeding Researches in Asia and Oceania
spellingShingle animal production
productivity
economics
environment
Devendra, C.
Productivity enhancement in animal production systems in Asia
title Productivity enhancement in animal production systems in Asia
title_full Productivity enhancement in animal production systems in Asia
title_fullStr Productivity enhancement in animal production systems in Asia
title_full_unstemmed Productivity enhancement in animal production systems in Asia
title_short Productivity enhancement in animal production systems in Asia
title_sort productivity enhancement in animal production systems in asia
topic animal production
productivity
economics
environment
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/50980
work_keys_str_mv AT devendrac productivityenhancementinanimalproductionsystemsinasia