A simulation of the effects of breeding season on the productivity of Small East African goats on a Kenyan rangeland

Seasonal breeding is potentially a powerful intervention affecting productivily, particularly so in semi-arid environments where seasonal differences are great; however, variability is also great, increasing the risk for such interventions. Simulation was used to examine the effects of 5 breeding re...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Carles, A.B., Blackburn, H.D., Schwartz, H.J.
Formato: Conference Paper
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 1992
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/70824
_version_ 1855521738936287232
author Carles, A.B.
Blackburn, H.D.
Schwartz, H.J.
author_browse Blackburn, H.D.
Carles, A.B.
Schwartz, H.J.
author_facet Carles, A.B.
Blackburn, H.D.
Schwartz, H.J.
author_sort Carles, A.B.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Seasonal breeding is potentially a powerful intervention affecting productivily, particularly so in semi-arid environments where seasonal differences are great; however, variability is also great, increasing the risk for such interventions. Simulation was used to examine the effects of 5 breeding regimes covering the range of the main possibilities. For breeding once a year, these were (l) mating and birth at times of favourable forage: (2) mating at; and (3) mating at a favourable and birth at an unfavourable time. For more frequent breeding, simulations were for (4) mating 3 times in 2 years; and (5) mating for 10 months of the year (all other systems were confined to 2 months). The rankings for productivity and efficiency were the same for all 5 breeding regimes. The first system had the highest absolute level of production and efficiency; on a biomass basis; this system was 226% higher than the least (3), and 22% higher than the regime considered to have the least risk (5). On energy basis efficiencies ranged from 10.5 to 5.9%. Milk production was the highest, and risk was the lowest for the last two. So the final choice should depend on qualitative aspects of the different products, and the acceptable level of risk, as well as the absolute level and efficiency of production.
format Conference Paper
id CGSpace70824
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 1992
publishDateRange 1992
publishDateSort 1992
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace708242023-02-15T13:12:09Z A simulation of the effects of breeding season on the productivity of Small East African goats on a Kenyan rangeland Carles, A.B. Blackburn, H.D. Schwartz, H.J. goats breeds feeds animal production productivity fertility mortality rangelands breeding seasons Seasonal breeding is potentially a powerful intervention affecting productivily, particularly so in semi-arid environments where seasonal differences are great; however, variability is also great, increasing the risk for such interventions. Simulation was used to examine the effects of 5 breeding regimes covering the range of the main possibilities. For breeding once a year, these were (l) mating and birth at times of favourable forage: (2) mating at; and (3) mating at a favourable and birth at an unfavourable time. For more frequent breeding, simulations were for (4) mating 3 times in 2 years; and (5) mating for 10 months of the year (all other systems were confined to 2 months). The rankings for productivity and efficiency were the same for all 5 breeding regimes. The first system had the highest absolute level of production and efficiency; on a biomass basis; this system was 226% higher than the least (3), and 22% higher than the regime considered to have the least risk (5). On energy basis efficiencies ranged from 10.5 to 5.9%. Milk production was the highest, and risk was the lowest for the last two. So the final choice should depend on qualitative aspects of the different products, and the acceptable level of risk, as well as the absolute level and efficiency of production. 1992 2016-02-08T09:03:10Z 2016-02-08T09:03:10Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/70824 en Limited Access
spellingShingle goats
breeds
feeds
animal production
productivity
fertility
mortality
rangelands
breeding seasons
Carles, A.B.
Blackburn, H.D.
Schwartz, H.J.
A simulation of the effects of breeding season on the productivity of Small East African goats on a Kenyan rangeland
title A simulation of the effects of breeding season on the productivity of Small East African goats on a Kenyan rangeland
title_full A simulation of the effects of breeding season on the productivity of Small East African goats on a Kenyan rangeland
title_fullStr A simulation of the effects of breeding season on the productivity of Small East African goats on a Kenyan rangeland
title_full_unstemmed A simulation of the effects of breeding season on the productivity of Small East African goats on a Kenyan rangeland
title_short A simulation of the effects of breeding season on the productivity of Small East African goats on a Kenyan rangeland
title_sort simulation of the effects of breeding season on the productivity of small east african goats on a kenyan rangeland
topic goats
breeds
feeds
animal production
productivity
fertility
mortality
rangelands
breeding seasons
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/70824
work_keys_str_mv AT carlesab asimulationoftheeffectsofbreedingseasonontheproductivityofsmalleastafricangoatsonakenyanrangeland
AT blackburnhd asimulationoftheeffectsofbreedingseasonontheproductivityofsmalleastafricangoatsonakenyanrangeland
AT schwartzhj asimulationoftheeffectsofbreedingseasonontheproductivityofsmalleastafricangoatsonakenyanrangeland
AT carlesab simulationoftheeffectsofbreedingseasonontheproductivityofsmalleastafricangoatsonakenyanrangeland
AT blackburnhd simulationoftheeffectsofbreedingseasonontheproductivityofsmalleastafricangoatsonakenyanrangeland
AT schwartzhj simulationoftheeffectsofbreedingseasonontheproductivityofsmalleastafricangoatsonakenyanrangeland