Southern Africa: Clippings

(Formerly) strange bedfellows in Zimbabwe: Crop and livestock researchers unite to improve smallholder agricultural in the country

CPWF exchange visit 21

The ultimate test: Do livestock eat this feed? Yes. (Photo on Flickr by Swathi Sridharan/ICRISAT).

In 2012, three CGIAR centres — the International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI), based in Africa; the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT), based in Mexico; and the International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT), based in India — launched a joint project called ‘Integrating crops and livestock for improved food security and livelihoods in Zimbabwe, or ‘ZimCLIFS’ for short.

‘The goal of the project is to develop ways to increase agricultural production, improve household food security, alleviate poverty, and thereby reduce food-aid dependency in rural Zimbabwe through better integration of crop and livestock production and market participation. The inception workshop, held 17–19 October 2012, was attended by international project managers and local stakeholders, including research, extension, private-sector, and NGO personnel, and farmers, totaling 41 participants.’

This project has three big objectives:
(1) Increase the productivity of Zimbabwe’s many smallholder ‘mixed’ crop-and-livestock farmers in four districts and two very different regions, one with high potential for agriculture, the other with low potential.
(2) Increase access by these farmers to resources, technologies, information and markets by strengthening the value chains for cattle, goats, maize, sorghum and legumes in these two districts.
(3) Increase the knowledge and skills of Zimbabwe’s research, extension and agribusiness staff.

Godfrey Manyawu

The ILRI coordinator for this multi-centre project on ‘Integrating crops and livestock for improved food security and livelihoods in rural Zimbabwe’ is Godfrey Manyawu (photo credit: ILRI).

Since its launch in late 2012, the project has established field trials on 102 farm sites and, in January of this year, conducted a data collection training workshop run by staff from ILRI and CIMMYT.

Also in January, project manager John Dixon, of the Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research (ACIAR) and a consultant visited ZimCLIFS the CIMMYT office in Harare and project sites to see how far the project had progressed.

They witnessed conservation agriculture trials in which maize is grown along with livestock-palatable and unpalatable legume species, with the palatable species used to feed livestock and the unpalatable species used to generate biomass for soil cover in the subsequent season, given that livestock graze communally in the area. . . . Dixon also visited a local abattoir and a goat market as part of appreciating the value chain in livestock production.’

The project runs until July 2015.

Read more about this project on the ILRI website, and on the CIMMYT Blog: ZimCLIFS integrate crop and livestock production research in Zimbabwe, 9 Apr 2013.


Filed under: Crop-Livestock, ILRI, PA, PLE, Project, Southern Africa Tagged: ACIAR, Cowpea, ICRISAT, Maize, Mucuna, Zimbabwe, ZimCLIFS

Small stock connections lead to better business for goat keepers in Zimbabwe

Goats 1

Feed is scarce for livestock in the dry season, farmers can lose up to 30% of their herds in these three months (photo on Flickr by ICRISAT/Swathi Sridharan.

Willie Dar, director general of the International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT), highlights the success of taking a ‘value chain’ approach to improving goat production and marketing by small-scale farmers in Zimbabwe.

‘. . . [H]ow does . . .  innovation come about? One exciting example is the transformation of goat marketing underway now in southwestern Zimbabwe. We and our partners — SNV, Organization of Rural Associations for Progress (ORAP), the International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI) and officials in the Ministry of Agriculture, Mechanisation and Irrigation Development — thought that if the value-chain interest groups put their heads together, they could improve the system for everyone concerned. In addition to goat keepers, those interest groups include buyers, processors, government agencies that provide livestock health services, and input suppliers. In development parlance, this type of multi-stakeholder association has come to be known as an “innovation platform”. . . .

Gwanda 12

Clinching the deal: Cash changes hands at the end of a sale (photo on Flickr by ICRISAT/Swathi Sridharan).

‘As a result of all these innovations, the prices received by smallholder goat sellers – at least a third of whom are women — have approximately doubled over the last five years, to about US$50 per goat. They find livestock much more profitable than crops, and see livestock-raising as their ticket to prosperity.

CPWF exchange visit 9

ICRISAT scientist Patricia Masikati talks about using mucuna as livestock feed to help animals survive the dry season (photo on Flickr by ICRISAT/Swathi Sridharan).

‘The great thing about innovation platforms is that they keep right on innovating, as long as the capacities for innovation are nurtured and strengthened. This is where we and other supportive organizations can play a role.

An innovation platform isn’t yet another brick-walled institution. It is about connecting people across institutions to share ideas and innovate a future that extends beyond ‘business as usual’. . . .

Read the whole article at ICRISAT’s Director General’s Blog: Innovate to include, 19 Mar 2013.


Filed under: Feeds, Forages, Goats, ILRI, Markets, PA, Small Ruminants, Southern Africa, Value Chains Tagged: Goats, ICRISAT, Willie Dar, Zimbabwe

Vaccine developed by KARI, supported by ILRI, is ‘milestone in control of Africa’s livestock diseases’

Faith Kivuti and Mom Milking a Cow

Faith Kivuti with her mother milking a cow in Kenya (photo on Flickr by Jeff Haskins).

A vaccine to protect cattle against a lethal disease known as East Coast fever has been launched in Kenya, where Kenya Livestock Development Minister Mohammed Kuti says the development ‘is a big relief to livestock farmers in East, Central and Southern Africa where about 1.1 million cattle are lost to the disease every year.

The vaccine was developed jointly by the Kenya Agricultural Research Institute, the International Livestock Research Institute, Food and Agriculture Organisation and the Global Alliance for Livestock and Veterinary Medicine.

‘Dr Kuti said the realisation of the vaccine is a milestone in the control of livestock diseases in Africa particularly livestock keepers in Kenya. . . .

‘In a speech read on his behalf by the Director of Veterinary Services, Dr Peter Maina Ithondeka, Kuti said the disease was a major constraint preventing farmers from keeping improved breeds in areas where it is rampant.

‘He said the disease would kill close to 100 per cent of the exotic dairy cattle. It is also a major killer of other varieties kept by local pastoralists. . . .

‘“The vaccine is now a boost on agricultural production through marketing, value-addition and agri-business will improve the livelihoods of Kenyans and create wealth,” he said.

‘Ithondeka said the disease endangered 10 million animals in sub-Saharan Africa and that drugs used to treat the disease are very expensive — above the reach or ordinary farmers. . . .

‘Kenya National Federation of Agricultural Producers (Kenfap) lauded institutions that carried out tests and developed the vaccine. . . .

Kuti said Vision 2030 recognises livestock development as a key player in national development and a major component of the wider agricultural sector.’

Read the whole article by Osinde Obare at Standard Digital (Kenya): Reprieve to pastoralists as new vaccine for animal fever unveiled, 9 Dec 2012.


Filed under: Animal Diseases, Animal Health, Biotech, Cattle, Central Africa, Disease Control, East Africa, ECF, ILRI, Kenya, Launch, PA, Southern Africa, Vaccines Tagged: FAO, GALVmed, KARI, Mohammed Kuti, Standard Digital

New Australian International Food Security Centre seeks partnerships in Africa

Commissioners in Africa

Mellissa Wood (4th left), of the Australian International Food Security Centre, and other members of the the Commission for International Agricultural Research on a visit to ILRI in March 2012 (photo credit: ILRI).

A new initiative has been launched by the Australian International Food Security Centre to improve food security in Africa. The centre, which falls under the Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research, will spend AUD33 million (USD33.8 million) over four years to support food production in Africa as well as in Asia and the Pacific region.

‘This initiative will give African researchers access to Australian research and expertise to support smallholder farmers, including livestock keepers, through partnerships that respond to their priorities,’ said Mellissa Wood, the managing director of the Canberra-based Australian International Food Security Centre. Wood was speaking at a meeting at the International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI) on 17 July 2012.

The new program is looking to engage partners in Africa and over the coming months will identify priorities to guide its operations on the continent. Program staff will consult with agricultural experts in different countries and set up an international advisory committee and a regional office in the lead up to an international food security conference being organized this November in Australia.

By studying African farming systems and reviewing existing research on farming practices on the continent, this new initiative will work to help bridge the gaps that remain between agricultural technologies, policies and practices and their adoption by Africa’s smallholder farmers. ‘We want to understand the incentives and barriers to delivery and adoption and how to accelerate the provision of practical solutions to benefit smallholders,’ said Wood. ‘Understanding these issues will help us improve the nutritional quality, safety and diversity of food; reduce post harvest losses; and enable better access to markets and other business opportunities.’

One of the initiative’s ongoing activities includes a project on ‘Strengthening food security and value chain efficiency through family poultry and crop integration in eastern and southern Africa’. This project, now in its design phase in Tanzania and Zambia, will explore how family poultry and crop farmers can improve the efficiencies of their production systems and whether they can increase their trade by making better use of supplementary feed from their cropping. The project will also conduct ecological assessments status to identify best-bet opportunities for chicken farming. This project will make use of relevant research outputs of the African Union Interafrican Bureau for Animal Resources, ILRI and other organizations.

The Australian International Food Security Centre is looking to work with national and international partners, including researchers, extension workers and the public and private sectors, to help increase and sustain the productivity of smallholder African farms, markets, value chains and social systems.

For more information email: aifsc@aciar.gov.au or register your interest at http://aciar.gov.au/aifscconsultation

Read more: http://aciar.gov.au/aifsc


Filed under: Agriculture, Capacity Strengthening, East Africa, Event, Farming Systems, Food security, Livelihoods, PA, Partnerships, Southern Africa

Innovation platforms: Documenting experiences from the imGoats project and beyond

Innovation platforms are a complex and some would say a not-so-straightforward approach. Nevertheless, ILRI, other CGIAR centers and other partners are using this approach in various projects such as the Nile Basin Development Challenge, IMGoats and the recently-completed Fodder Adoption and Fodder Innovation projects.

What are innovation platforms exactly?

This poster gives some ideas.

 

In light of experiences shared and questions posed in the recent imGoats workshop, here we briefly take stock of some ILRI experiences.

The recent India-Mozambique goats (imGoats) project reflection and learning workshop (July 2012) in Udaipur helped shape some reflections. The project, which aims to “increase incomes and food security in a sustainable manner by enhancing pro-poor small ruminant value chains in India and Mozambique”, has been using innovation platforms in its three sites: Mozambique as well as Jharkhand and Rajasthan in India.

In the learning and reflection workshop, two sessions were dedicated to a) describing the innovation platform processes in the three sites and b) finding practical solutions to improve these processes.

Early reflections indicate that using innovation platforms is much appreciated because it helps solve different issues, creates awareness about a wider set of issues related to a specific research agenda, reduces the weight of project interventions against the environment in which they are taking place (as the local constituents are taking ownership of the IP agenda), informs planning for all IP members and – though arguably perhaps – reduces the timeline between raising an issue and finding a solution.

The imGoats participants also identified some challenges related to innovation platforms:

  • How to stimulate consistent participation of IP members?
  • Should we ensure the sustainability of the IP and if so, how?
  • How to facilitate the IP meetings and ensure strong engagement and ownership of participants?
  • How to facilitate activities in between IP meetings and, as much as possible, with value chain actors?

They also reflected what they would do differently if they were to start the IP process all over again, revealing interesting opportunities on the horizon:

  • Spending more time on advocating, explaining and agreeing about the  approach at the onset;
  • Getting to know all members better before developing secretariat and groups;
  • Pre-identifying issues that matter to goat farmers before bringing them to an IP meeting.
Group discussions at the imGoats project learning and reflection workshop

imGoats participants at the learning and reflection workshop sharing views about innovation platforms in India and Mozambique

Other wider IP questions raised in Udaipur concerned the diversity and intensity of participation, clarity of the vision/roles/tasks, information sharing and communication processes, problem-solving capabilities and facilitation mechanisms.

In the coming months, the imGoats project will try and unpack these questions and further document innovation platforms through:

  • A technical advisory note on collective action (including innovation platforms);
  • An internal reflection meeting on our experiences with IPs, hubs and collective action;
  • An article on IP processes in the imGoats project and on the outcomes registered;
  • Leaflet about the IP processes (in English and in Hindi).

More generally, ILRI and other organizations like it may need to better specify the roles they want to play vis-à-vis these platforms – which require a lot of facilitation and partnership/stakeholder management.

Read more about innovation platforms and systems


Filed under: Africa, Animal Production, Asia, CRP11, Drylands, Event, Goats, ILRI, India, Innovation Systems, Knowledge & Information, Livestock, MarketOpps, Mozambique, South Asia, Southern Africa Tagged: imGoats, innovation platforms

Supporting dryland pastoralism with eco-conservancies, livestock insurance and livestock-based drought interventions

Wildlfie-rich rangelands of Kitengela

The wildlfie-rich rangelands of Kitengela, outside Nairobi, Kenya (photo credit: ILRI/Stevie Mann).

Scientists at the Nairobi, Kenya, headquarters of the International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI) are this week hosting a regional inception workshop on a new CGIAR Research Program on dryland agriculture.

Three livestock-based models likely to be discussed at this week’s dryland agriculture workshop are index-based livestock insurance (see website and news), an innovation for pastoralists that is being piloted in northern Kenya; following research-based recommendations on how to better manage drought cycles in the Horn of Africa; and a Wildlife Lease Program to counter loss of wildlife migration on Kitengela rangelands, an hour’s drive from Nairobi, which is crucial for Nairobi National Park.

Farmbizafrica, a news website launched in April 2010, covered the latter in a story it published on the Kitengela Wildlife Lease Program in Mar of this year. This program, which has proved successful in Kenya’s wildlife-rich Masailands, involves the establishment of ‘eco-conservancies’, which work to protect both livestock-based pastoral livelihoods and populations of wildlife that have shared East Africa’s rangelands with the Masai for thousands of years. The following are excerpts from the Farmbizafrica  story.

‘[A] new model of paying pastoralists for conserving the ecosystem in reserves and parks is helping them diversify their income and end their dependence on rain fed agriculture alone.

‘The payment of pastoralists, mostly Maasais, has successfully been piloted in areas near Maasai Mara National Reserve and Kitengela, near the Nairobi National Park. In both areas, Maasai people have formed ‘eco-conservancies’ to protect their grazing areas for livestock and wildlife alike.

‘Under the payment for [e]cosystem services scheme, pastoralists are given monetary incentives in exchange for allowing their land to be used for ecological services that promote conservation, for example allowing free movement of wild animals in their land.

‘The pastoralists voluntarily agree not to sub divide, fence or cultivate the land they are in, in return for a fee that is paid to them. The pastoralists also commit to keeping the land open for livestock and wildlife grazing.

‘About 357 households living in Kitengela have given about 16,800 hectares of private land under the scheme, where they are paid roughly Sh900 per acre per year.

A report by the International Livestock Research Institute indicates that the income from the payment constitutes 59 per cent of the total off-farm earnings among participating households, but experts argue that the payment still remains paltry considering the sacrifices the pastoralists make.

‘. . . However in order to ensure that the conservation payment works for the long term, experts at the International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI) are investigating the trade offs to quantify how such interventions could be more equitable to pastoralists inhabiting these wildlife-rich areas.

The scheme comes hot on heels of a report recently released by ILRI which showed that despite government decision to invest Sh8.5bn in agriculture and funding irrigation schemes in drought ravaged parts of Turkana, the only feasible way to address future droughts is through investing in pastoralism in dry lands.

‘The report . . . argued that herding makes better economic sense than crop agriculture in many of the arid and semi-arid lands that constitute 80 per cent of the Horn of Africa, and that supporting mobile livestock herding communities in advance and with timely interventions can help people cope the next time drought threatens, and that pastoralists switching to growing crops that require extensive investment in irrigation would be counterproductive in the long run. . . .’

Other organizations represented at the ILRI-hosted CGIAR regional dryland workshop this week include the International Water Management Institute (IWMI), the International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT) and the World Agroforestry Centre (ICRAF). To learn more about the workshop, contact Pauline Aluoch at p.aluochATcgiar.org

Read the whole article about the Kitengela Wildlife Lease Program in Farmbizafrica: Pastoralists earn for conserving ecosystem, Mar 2012.

Read more about this CGIAR regional workshop on this earlier ILRI Clippings Blog: CGIAR drylands research program sets directions for eastern and southern Africa, 4 Jun 2012.

Read more about ILRI’s drought report on the ILRI News Blog: Investments in pastoralism offer best hope for combating droughts in East Africa’s drylands–Study, 24 Aug 2011, and Best ways to manage responses to recurring drought in Kenya’s drylands, 7 Aug 2011, and Livestock-based research recommendations for better managing drought in Kenya, 18 Jul 2011.

Read the ILRI drought report itself: An assessment of the response to the 2008–2009 drought in Kenya: A report to the European Union Delegation to the Republic of Kenya, by L Zwaagstra, Z Sharif, A Wambile, J de Leeuw, M Y Said, N Johnson, J Njuki, P Ericksen and M Herrero; Nairobi, Kenya: ILRI, 2010.


Filed under: Biodiversity, CRP11, Drought, Drylands, East Africa, Event, ILRI, Kenya, PA, Pastoralism, PLE, Research, Southern Africa, Vulnerability Tagged: Eco-conservancy, Farmbizafrica, IBLI, ICRAF, ICRISAT, IWMI, Jan de Leeuw, Kitengela, Masai Mara, Nairobi National Park, Polly Ericksen, The Wildlife Foundation

CGIAR Drylands Research Program sets directions for East and Southern Africa

This week in Nairobi, the International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI) hosts a ‘Regional Inception Workshop’ of the CGIAR Research Program ‘Integrated and Sustainable Agricultural Production Systems for Improved Food Security and Livelihoods in Dry Areas.’ The program is led by the International Center for Agricultural Research in Dry Areas (ICARDA).

The dry areas of the developing world occupy about 3 billion hectares and are home to 2.5 billion people: 41% of the earth’s land area and more than one-third of its population. About 16% of this population lives in chronic poverty. Drylands also face serious environmental constraints, which are likely to worsen as a result of climate change. Dryland agro-ecosystems include a diverse mix of food, fodder and fiber crops, vegetables, rangeland and pasture species, fruit and fuel-wood trees, medicinal plants, livestock and fish.

This research program is about getting the mix right in order to alleviate poverty, enhance food security and ensure environmental sustainability in dryland agro-ecosystems while enhancing social and gender-equitable development. The overarching challenge is to deliver benefits to the poor and vulnerable, especially women. It will thus focus on target dryland areas/systems, identified by two criteria: (i) those with the deepest endemic poverty and most vulnerable people, often associated with severe natural resource degradation, environmental variability, and social marginalization, and (ii) those with the greatest potential to impact on food security and poverty in the short to medium term.

The program is driven by a conceptual framework in which four Strategic Research Themes (SRTs) cut across the five focus Regions (they represent the steps in the impact pathway).

  • SRT1: Approaches and models for strengthening innovation systems, building stakeholder innovation capacity, and linking knowledge to policy action
  • SRT2: Reducing vulnerability and managing risk
  • SRT3: Sustainable intensification for more productive, profitable and diversified dryland agriculture with well-established linkages to markets
  • SRT4: Measuring impacts and cross-regional synthesis

During the proposal development, it was apparent that details of implementation at the Target areas and Site level within each of the five Target Regions, would need to be further developed  though “regional inception workshops’ with partners.

The June 2012 workshop has been developed by an interim Interdisciplinary Research Team headed by ILRI, with participants from the World Agroforestry Institute (ICRAF), the International Water Management Institute (IWMI) and the International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT).

The meeting aims to bring together partners working in the target areas in East and Southern Africa to discuss key hypotheses and research questions; to agree on initial sites for activities; and to develop impact pathways and implementation plans.

Expected outcomes of the workshop include:

1. Specific research hypotheses for the action and satellite sites, based upon a problem analysis that identifies the key constraints and challenges.
2. Impact pathway based upon problem analysis, successful interventions, and identified research for development gaps. This pathway will define outcomes, objectives, outputs.
3. Agreement on initial sites in each target area.
4. Initial activities for 3 years proposed in each action and satellite site.
5. Confirmation of partners’ roles.
6. Implementation plan drafted with impact indicators.
7. Additional characterization information.


Filed under: Africa, Agriculture, CRP11, Drylands, East Africa, Event, Livestock Systems, PLE, Research, Southern Africa

Could Rift Valley fever be a weapon of mass destruction? An insidious insect-animal-people infection loop explored

The Fifth Plague: Livestock Disease, woodcut by Gustave Doré, 1866 (public domain, via Wikimedia Commons).

Anthrax, bird flu , Ebola, HIV-AIDS, H1N1, H5N1, influenza, Rift Valley fever, SARS: What are the disease links between people, animals and environments? And what are we doing to protect ourselves against the next outbreak of a deadly infectious disease? A series being published in the Huffington Post is exploring such ‘living weapons’ and our preparedness, or lack thereof, in dealing with them. Keeping an eye on livestock diseases, experts agree, is a major way to prevent deadly outbreaks of human diseases. And these animal-human disease links, they say, are under-appreciated and under-funded.

Take Rift Valley fever, a disease transmitted between mosquitoes, livestock and people in Africa. Although considered by many experts to be a potential bioterrorist weapon, it remains underfunded.

As Lynne Peeples of the Huffington Post reports:

This emphasis on coordination among medical, veterinary and environmental health scientists, reflecting the global “One Health” movement, could also be employed in the development of vaccines and treatments for bioterror threats.

Rift Valley fever virus is a prime candidate for such collaboration, says BioProtection Systems’ [Ramond] Flick, an expert on emerging infectious disease, which can afflict both animals and humans. Creating a livestock vaccine would reduce the risk of human infection.

However, because the disease is not considered a priority human bioterrorism agent by the government, research funding is low. Jason McDonald, a CDC spokesperson, explains the agency’s exclusion of Rift Valley: humans typically contract the virus through bites of infected mosquitoes and just 1 percent of these victims die.

Flick disagrees.

The public’s current awareness of Rift Valley fever and its perception of the West Nile virus threat before 1999 are strikingly similar, he says. West Nile had not been given much thought before it cropped up in New York City. Within a few years it had spread across the country.

Flick warns of even more devastating consequences with the relatively unknown bug. More mosquito species can carry Rift Valley than West Nile. It is also more virulent. And according to research in Arabia and Africa, the fatality rate may actually be increasing, killing more than 30 percent of people infected during recent outbreaks. Further, there does appear to be potential for human-to-human transmission.’

Scientists at the International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI) have been working with partner organizations in eastern and southern Africa to better understand the spread of Rift Valley fever. They are developing a toolkit that will help decision-makers make timely and appropriate interventions to prevent the disease from jumping from cattle to the poor people who rear them. The toolkit includes advice on the conditions that suit the Rift Valley fever virus infecting cattle populations (e.g., following unusually heavy rains northern Kenya and other parts of the Horn’s drylands), at which point disease control agents should begin surveillance to diagnose and stop the spread disease in the infected animals before it has time to begin infecting human populations.

Efforts to better align the work of organizations researching Rift Valley fever were the focus this month (Feb 2012) of a workshop organized and hosted by ILRI at its Nairobi headquarters. Watch for a forthcoming post on the ILRI New Blog on that workshop and what it achieved.

The urgency of adopting a ‘one health’ approach to disease control is highlighted by the Huffington Post‘s Lynne Peeples.

‘. . . Biological weapons have a long and sordid history, from catapulting infected corpses to dropping bombs of plague-infected fleas. But what if a biological weapon were being developed and studied by scientists that had the potential to kill not a battalion or a city, but 150 million people? According to some public health and defense officials, that is exactly what we’re facing, following the cultivation of a highly contagious form of H5N1—a lethal bug better known as bird flu. The contagion, they fear, could escape the lab or its recipe could land in the wrong hands.

. . . A super flu is just one of a growing list of potential pandemics that could develop in the near future, either as a result of terrorism, of superbugs leaping from animals to humans, or both. In fact, nearly 80 percent of the bioterrorism agents recognized by the U.S. government started in animals. . . . And nature will spawn new agents continuously.’

‘This means a terrorist may need few tools, little training, minimal money and no published blueprint to harvest a superbug and then unleash it in food, water, air or via insect vectors such as fleas or mosquitos. . . .

The overlap of bioterrorism agents and emerging infectious disease also means that officials could defend against biological attacks and natural outbreaks in tandem.’

‘. . . Yet federal funding to prevent and respond to bioterrorism is plummeting. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s biodefense budget peaked in 2005 at about $1.2 billion. The 2012 budget is down to $800 million, with state and local programs—the country’s first line of defense—absorbing some of the most significant cuts. . . . The U.S. “remains largely unprepared for a large-scale bioterrorism attack or deadly disease outbreak.”

. . . Meanwhile, nature knows no rules or regulations and continues to create new viruses and alter old ones. And because animal-borne diseases may need no help spilling over into humans, outbreak investigations could easily confuse intentional and natural outbreaks.

“The government spends a lot of money developing biosensors,” says Princeton’s Kahn, referring to air sampling surveillance and other sophisticated systems. “But I would argue the best ones are flying around,” or in this case, hanging out on farms.

Zoos can be particularly good sources of sentinels, she adds, as they house a wide array of animals from around the world with different levels of susceptibility. Most zoos are also located near densely populated urban centers, which tend to be terrorism “hot spots.”

“There’s a possibility that the high-tech tools are not even in the right place,” says Rabinowitz. “By being constantly aware of new events in animals as well as in humans and the environment, we’re more likely to pick up a new threat.”. . .

This emphasis on coordination among medical, veterinary and environmental health scientists, reflecting the global “One Health” movement, could also be employed in the development of vaccines and treatments for bioterror threats. . . .

Researchers have discovered an average of 15 to 20 previously unknown diseases in each of the past few decades, including incurable diseases like HIV/AIDS, ebola and SARS, with new pathogens likely to emerge and spread faster due to the global population’s increasing size and mobility.’

‘. . . The ability to detect and identify diseases as they initially emerge can go a long way in thwarting an outbreak, [Scott Lillibridge] says. It can provide the time to prepare, including upgrading quarantines at the border, researching a vaccine and identifying what drugs might successfully combat the infection.

‘”A couple weeks can be critical,” says Lillibridge. “It can make an administration look foolish or like they’re in control.”

‘Overall, the U.S. government spent approximately $60 billion on biodefense from 2001 to 2009. Only 2 percent of that was dedicated to preventive measures such as programs to discover and reduce biological threats overseas, according to Koblentz.

To protect Americans, we must look at what is going on in the rest of the world,” says Khan.

ANSER’s Gursky, recently returned from hosting a NATO meeting in Central Europe: “The most important strategy is to build up the capabilities that we share, which means reaching across borders and politics,” she says.’

‘Coalescing efforts might also allow the government to do more with less. “We’re looking at not only man being a terrorist, but nature can be a terrorist as well,” says Henderson. “The natural occurrence of a disease gives us similar problems, so whatever we’re doing to prepare for one, prepares us for the other.”‘

Read the whole article, by Lynne Peeples, in the Huffington Post: Bioterrorism funding withers as death germs thrive in labs, nature, 10 Feb 2012; this article is part of a series, ‘The Infection Loop,’ investigating the complex links between human, animal and environment.

Read more on ILRI’s News Blog and Clippings Blog about recent research advances in better control of Rift Valley fever.


Filed under: Animal Diseases, Biotech, Biotechnology, Diagnostics, Disease Control, Drylands, East Africa, Emerging Diseases, Environment, Epidemiology, Event, Health (human), HIV-AIDS, ILRI, Kenya, PA, Research, Southern Africa, USA, Zoonotic Diseases Tagged: Biological weapons, Huffington Post, One Health, Rift Valley fever

Multi-stakeholder innovation in Africa: Dairy and beef cases feature in new report from FARA

The Forum on Agricultural Research in Africa just published a new report on agricultural innovation in sub-Saharan Africa: experiences from multiple-stakeholder approaches.

The report draws together case experiences across Africa with an ‘integrated agriculture research for development (IAR4D) approach’ that brings together multiple actors along a commodity value chain to address challenges and identify opportunities to generate innovation.

Included in the cases are assessments of dairy development in Kenya and Uganda as well as the beef sector in Botswana.

On Kenya, the report observes: ‘The development of a successful smallholder industry requires two complimentary elements. Firstly, increased productivity requires improved livestock breeds, strong disease control and veterinary services and improved quality and quantity of feeds. Given the need to encourage many smallholder dairy producers, delivery of support services remains dependent on local institutions and their development. Secondly, expanding market institutions with facilities for milk bulking and collection, and group organisational structures are essential and can be most effectively supplied by the private sector. Although formal licensed markets based on processed milk products are important, informal markets selling raw milk, informal dairy products with low-cost processing remain an essential component of a successful dairy industry.’

On Uganda, the report observes: ‘A key lesson is the need for ongoing discussions and coordination efforts by stakeholders along the value chain. This includes smallholder farmers and traders, development agencies, and policymakers. Although the dairy industry and its supporting services were liberalised, there is a need to coordinate business development services, involving farmer organisations, while avoiding direct subsidies that are known to stifle markets.’

On Botswana, the report observes: ‘Understanding the role the private sector plays in facilitating change at local, regional, and national government levels is important when considering changes to the enabling environment for value chains. It is essential that the private sector is able to speak with an informed and unified voice and is able to engage with Government.’

Overall:

The case studies demonstrated that successful innovation is dependent on a wide range of factors and interventions, the most important being the existence or creation of a network of research, training and development stakeholder groups drawn from public, private and NGO sectors.

Download the report …


Filed under: Africa, Agriculture, Animal Production, Animal Products, Botswana, Cattle, Dairying, East Africa, Innovation Systems, Kenya, Livestock, Report, Southern Africa, Uganda, Value Chains Tagged: FARA, IAR4D

ILRI in southern Africa–More efforts needed to address vulnerability and climate change

For the November 2011 ‘liveSTOCK Exchange’ event at ILRI, Sikhalazo Dube, from South Africa’s Agricultural Research Council (ARC), reflects on ILRI’s work in southern Africa …

Livestock research and development practitioners in the region welcomed the opening up of ILRI’s regional office in southern Africa five years ago. ILRI identified two areas as possible entry points: a) enhancing the market participation of smallholder farmers, and b) reducing the vulnerability and increasing the resilience of communities who derive the bulk of their livelihoods from livestock.

Since then, ILRI has made progress with the theme on enhancing market opportunities, as is shown by ongoing work on value chain analysis and innovations systems approaches with a focus on cattle and goats in selected countries of the Southern African Development Community (SADC). However, there is still a visible gap on the reducing vulnerability theme. This is one area that ILRI still needs to do more in this region.

This region has been identified as one of the hotspots for climate change with most model projections to 2050 indicating a largely dry region. There is no doubt that management of feeding resources for livestock, including water, will become an area where we need innovations focused on mitigation and adaptation to climate change.

As we look to the future, we need to address the role of livestock, particularly small stock, in the livelihoods of poor farmers. History will judge us by our ability to feed vulnerable members of society in a climate-challenged world. There is opportunity for ILRI to strengthen its collaboration with existing partners and create new ones in order to meaningfully contribute to this agenda.

We look forward to continued engagement with ILRI in advancing the livestock agenda for sustainable natural resources in the face of global climate change. As an ILRI champion in this region, I am grateful to have worked under the guidance of former ILRI director general Carlos Seré and have no doubt that ILRI and the partners benefited from his great leadership. I had the pleasure of meeting Carlos and listening and reading his work. His passion was evident and inspirational.

I wish Carlos well in his new endeavors and look forward to working with ILRI’s new director general, Jimmy Smith.

Agriculture remains the cornerstone of the society we live in and together we can do more!

Contributed by Sikhalazo Dube, senior scientist, rangeland ecology and management, with the Agricultural Research Council (ARC) of South Africa and ILRI ‘champion’ in the region.

On 9 and 10 November 2011, the ILRI Board of Trustees hosted a 2-day ‘liveSTOCK Exchange’ to discuss and reflect on livestock research for development. The event synthesized sector and ILRI learning and helped frame future livestock research for development directions.

The liveSTOCK Exchange also marked the leadership and contributions of Dr. Carlos Seré as ILRI Director General. See all posts in this series / Sign up for email alerts


Filed under: Animal Production, Climate Change, ILRI, Livestock, Opinion piece, Pro-Poor Livestock, Research, Southern Africa, Vulnerability Tagged: 2011 Livestock Xchange Conference (ILRI Addis), livestockX

Animal health and emerging diseases a focus for CIRAD in East and Southern Africa

The Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement (CIRAD) is a French research center working with developing countries to tackle international agricultural and development issues.

It’s recently updated site on it work in East and Southern Africa introduces CIRAD’s activities in the region. ‘Animal health and emerging diseases’ is one of the focus areas and includes the following projects:

  • Risk analysis in swine fever transmission (ASFRISK)
  • A regional network on Foot and Mouth Disease (FMD)
  • Ecology and epidemiology of avian influenza (H1N1) in Southern countries (GRIPAVI)
  • Ngamiland Interface Disease Investigation (NIDI)
  • Effect of increased aridity and drought frequency on socio-écological systems in the savanna (SAVARID)
  • Improving swine fever control in Maurice (TCP)
  • Vaccines for the Control of Neglected Animal Diseases in Africa (VACNADA)

Visit the web site


Filed under: Africa, Agri-Health, Animal Diseases, Animal Health, CRP4, Disease Control, East Africa, Emerging Diseases, Livestock, Research, Southern Africa, Zoonotic Diseases Tagged: CIRAD

Coping with weather variability–urgent in Africa whether or not it is due to climate change

Australia 1 - climate change canvas

The worst drought in 60 or so years is biting deeper into countries in the Horn of Africa; artists from around the world painted canvases illustrating the human impact of climate change in their countries; 16 of these canvases were being exhibited at the UN Climate Negotiations in Poznan, Poland, in Dec 2008 (image credit: Piotr Fajfer / Oxfam International).

‘As parts of the Horn of Africa experience their driest periods in 60 years, pushing the numbers needing aid to beyond 10 million, some have been quick to blame climate change.

‘But no single event can be attributed to climate change, which involves long-term (decades or longer) trends in climate variability. There is, however, consensus in attributing the drought to the particularly strong La Niña event. The impact of climate change on the intensity and frequency of La Niña and El Niño in future is a big unknown.

‘IRIN spoke to two experts, an environmentalist and a scientist, who have worked extensively in the region:

‘Philip Thornton, a senior scientist who works part-time with the Nairobi-based International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI) and the University of Edinburgh-based Institute of Atmospheric and Environmental Sciences, has done some pioneering work on projections of climate-change impact in eastern and southern Africa.

‘He told IRIN via email that projections of the climate-change impact in East Africa were “a problem” as the authoritative Inter-governmental Panel on Climate Change’s Fourth Assessment Report “indicated that there was good consensus among the climate models that rainfall was likely to increase during the current century.

‘”But work by other climate scientists since then suggests that … certain Indian Ocean effects in East Africa may not actually occur.

‘”Some people think that East Africa is drying, and has dried over recent years; currently there is no hard, general evidence of this, and it is very difficult as yet to see where the statistical trends of rainfall in the region are heading, but these will of course become apparent in time.”

‘The IPCC’s Fifth Assessment Report will be released in 2014.

‘Jan de Leeuw is the operating project leader in the vulnerability and sustainability in pastoral and agro-pastoral systems within ILRI’s People, Livestock and Environment theme. He points out that this La Niña event is one of the strongest since the 1970s. But he says La Niña, along with El Niño, appear in cycles that “we don’t understand”. . . .

‘De Leeuw writes: “La Niña events were common from 1950 till 1976. Since then we had two decades [until about 1996] with fewer events of lesser depth. This has changed since then and over the last 15 years or so we have had more frequent La Niña events.”

‘Events as deep as the current La Niña occur once in 20 or 30 years, writes De Leeuw. “We are in a period now of more frequent La Niña events, but such a situation was there from 1950 till 1976 also.”

‘Thornton has the last word when he says research attention must focus on developing effective early warning systems and ways to help people affected by these events, who have no use for “academic” consideration of the linkages with climate change to cope better with the current levels of weather variability, “whatever happens in the future”.

Read the whole article at IRIN: Too soon to blame climate change for drought, 12 Jul 2011.


Filed under: Climate Change, Drought, East Africa, Ethiopia, ILRI, Kenya, LivestockFutures, PA, Pastoralism, PLE, Somalia, Southern Africa, Vulnerability Tagged: DroughtInHorn2011, El Nino, IRIN, Jan de Leeuw, La Nina, Philip Thornton, University of Edinburgh

Wildlife populations reported to be crashing in Africa’s renowned Mara and Okavango wildlife refuges

African Cape buffalo

The African Cape buffalo (photo credit: ILRI/Elsworth).

Is conservation of wild mammals and their environments in Africa at a crisis point? Are wildlife populations “crashing” in Africa’s most renowned wildlife reserves? Two new reports suggest that may be the case. The following was reported in the Guardian today.

‘The Okavango delta in Botswana has suffered “catastrophic” species loss over the past 15 years, researchers have announced , in the latest sign of a growing crisis for wildlife in Africa.

‘Some wild animal populations in the delta, one of the wonders of the natural world, have shrunk by up to 90% and are facing local extinction, according to the most comprehensive aerial survey yet undertaken there.

‘The findings come after a study this month showed dramatic declines in animal numbers in the Masai Mara wildlife reserve, south-west Kenya, raising anxiety about the effectiveness of conservation across the continent. . . .

‘”The results were unexpected,” said Mike Chase, founder of Elephants without Borders, which did the aerial survey of the region. “There has been a cosy pretence that wildlife is thriving and doing well in the Okavango delta. Our survey provides the first scientific evidence that wildlife is declining, and pretty sharply too. That cosy pretence has been blown out of the water.”

‘He added: “It is still one of Africa’s great wildlife destinations, but doing nothing will jeopardise that reputation.”

‘Chase’s study found that 11 species have declined by 61% since a 1996 survey in Ngamiland district, the location of the delta. Ostrich numbers were worst hit; there was a 95% drop, from 11,893 animals to 497 last year. Some 90% of wildebeest were also wiped out, along with 84% of the population of the antelope tsessebe, 81% of warthogs and kudus, and nearly two-thirds of giraffes.

‘”The decline of wildebeest has been catastrophic. The numbers have fallen below the minimum of 500 breeding pairs to be sustainable. They are on the verge of local extinction. These are grim statistics. You would have expected to see serious decline since the 70s in somewhere like Kenya, but our trend analysis only goes back to the 90s. To have seen decline on our watch is totally unacceptable,” Chase said.

Chase suggested a drought in the 1980s and 1990s, plus bushfire, habitat encroachment and poaching, as the main reasons for the nosedive. “The causes are multiple and complex, but drought is the over-arching one.”. . .

‘The study was funded by Botswana’s government and Chase was due to present his findings to ministers and scientists on Friday. . . .

‘One politically sensitive topic is the fencing to separate wildlife from farmers’ livestock. Joseph Okori, a local wildlife expert, said: “We did see a great impact from fences on species like springbok, kudu and zebra. When drought comes these fences blocked them from normal migration patterns and access to water.”

‘The Okavango delta is not the only tourist destination in Africa to face a loss of natural bounty. Researchers found that in the Masai Mara, numbers of impala, warthog, giraffe, topi and Coke’s hartebeest had declined by more than 70% over three decades.

‘Scientists at Hohenheim University in Germany, and the International Livestock Research Institute [ILRI] in Nairobi, said wildebeest had again been badly hit: their celebrated migration now involved 64% fewer animals than it did in the early 1980s. Zebra numbers inside the reserve had fallen by three-quarters.

‘Joseph Ogutu, a senior statistician in the bioinformatics unit at Hohenheim University [and formerly a scientist at ILRI, where he did this research], said: “There is a crisis. And what we’re seeing in the Mara is not specific to that region.” The conflict between wildlife and farming livestock was seen as significant here too. Ogutu told of a 1,100% increase in cattle grazing in the reserve, along with poaching and changing land-use patterns – the primary causes of the Mara’s downward trend in wildlife populations.

‘Conservationists believe there are lessons to be learned from both trouble spots. “One of the big problems in both the Mara and the Okavango delta is that we are not looking at how the land around them is managed,” said Drew McVey, species programme officer at WWF-UK. “It’s very important that we have a more holistic approach to conservation and development and don’t seen these as isolated islands. We need to think of them as full ecosystems.”. . .’

Read the whole article in today’s GuardianDrought and poachers take Botswana’s natural wonder to brink of catastrophe, 18 June 2011.

Read more about ILRI’s recent comprehensive study in Kenya’s Masai Mara on the ILRI News Blog: Numbers of wildlife in Kenya’s famous Mara region have declined by two-thirds or more over last 33 years, 1 June 2011.


Filed under: Africa, Biodiversity, Botswana, East Africa, Environment, ILRI, Kenya, PA, PLE, Report, Southern Africa, Wildlife Tagged: Guardian, Hohenheim, Joseph Ogutu, Masai Mara, Okavango Delta

Reducing hunger and poverty through goat ‘value chains’ in India and Mozambique

ImGoats logo

In many of the world’s dry areas, goats provide poor people with nutrition and livelihoods. An imGoats Project is working to transform the lives of goat keepers in India and Mozambique by turning their subsistence-level goat production into viable and profitable enterprises.

This two-year (2011–2012) project aims to improve the performance of small ruminant value chains in India and Mozambique so they sustainably increase household incomes and food security and reduce the vulnerability of poor goat keepers, especially women. The project will develop and test models for developing goat value chains using innovation platforms and producer hubs.

Innovation platforms provide spaces for all actors in the goat value chain—from veterinary and other input suppliers to landless producers and small-scale farmers to middlemen buyers to market sellers—to interact to improve the performance of this value chain and the benefits it generates for all the actors along it. Producer hubs allow goat owners to sell their animals collectively, at better prices than they could get individually, and provide the producers with more cost-effective goods and services. The main aim of this project is to empower women and other relatively marginalized groups (e.g., scheduled castes and tribes in India and households caring for HIV/AIDS sufferers and headed by women in Mozambique) while developing goat value chain models that benefit the poor. Lessons learned and opportunities for scaling up and out will be communicated to policymakers and development practitioners.

This project is being conducted in semi-arid areas of India (Udaipur District, Rajasthan, and Dumka District, Jharkhand) and Mozambique (Inhassoro District, Northern Inhambane Province).

The International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI) is responsible for overall project implementation and leading the research. The BAIF Development Research Foundation in India and CARE International in Mozambique will lead the development aspects and local administration in their respective project sites. The project will collaborate with national researchers and other local development partners and will link up with community development projects supported by the International Fund for Agricultural Development in India and Mozambique to share experiences and lessons.

Download a brochure on ILRI’s imGoats Project or visit the project blogsite.
See a presentation by ILRI scientist Ranjitha Puskur on the imGOATS Project: Small ruminant value chains for reducing poverty and increasing food security in dryland areas of India and Mozambique, February 2011.


Filed under: Animal Production, CRP11, Drylands, ILRI, India, Innovation Systems, MarketOpps, Mozambique, PA, South Asia, Southern Africa, Trade, Value Chains, Women Tagged: BAIF, CARE, IFAD, imGoats, Ranjitha Puskur

ILRI mass-produced vaccine to protect livestock of poor herders against cancer-like disease

Maasai woman holds her calf immunized against East Coast fever

Field trials of a new vaccine batch for East Coast fever produced at the Nairobi-based International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI) are nearing completion; a Maasai woman from northern Tanzania holds her calf that has just been immunized against East Coast fever (picture credit: ILRI/Mann).

‘Thousands of pastoralists could be saved from destitution thanks to a much-needed vaccine that is being mass-produced to protect cattle against a deadly parasite.

‘Field trials of a new vaccine batch for East Coast fever produced at the Nairobi-based International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI) are nearing completion.

‘The first bulk batch of the vaccine, produced by ILRI 15 years ago, has protected one million animals, improving the living standards of livestock keepers.

‘East Coast fever is a tick-transmitted disease that kills thousands of cows every year in Africa.

‘Calves are particularly susceptible to the disease. In herds kept by the pastoral Maasai people, for example, the disease kills from 20 to 50 per cent of all unvaccinated calves.

‘An experimental vaccine against the fever was first developed more than 30 years ago. This has been followed by further testing with major funding from the UK Department for International Development (DfID) and to facilitate the mass production of the vaccine. East Coast Fever puts the lives of more than 25 million cattle at risk. In 11 African countries, the disease is now endemic and endangers a further 10 million animals in new regions such as Southern Sudan, where the disease has been spreading fast. The vaccine could save the 11 affected countries at least £175 million (Sh23.9 Billion) a year.

‘The immunisation procedure—called “infection-and-treatment” because the animals are infected with whole parasites while being treated with antibiotics to stop development of disease—has proved highly effective. But initial stocks produced in the 1990s recently ran low.

‘The infection-and-treatment immunisation method against East Coast fever was developed by research conducted over three decades by the East African Community, the Kenya Agricultural Research Institute (Kari) at Muguga, and ILRI.

‘In addition to producing the infection-and-treatment vaccine, ILRI is also working to develop a genetically engineered next-generation vaccine. ILRI, at the request of the Africa Union/Inter-African Bureau for Animal Resources and chief veterinary officers in affected countries, produced one million doses of vaccine to fill this gap.

‘However, for the longer term it is critical that sustainable commercial systems for vaccine production, distribution and delivery are established.

‘With Sh2.2 billion provided by DFID and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the charity GALVmed is fostering innovative commercial means to do just this, beginning with the registration and commercial distribution and delivery of this new batch of the vaccine. . . .’

Read the whole article at the Standard (Kenya): Mass production of vaccine to livestock, 16 April 2011.


Filed under: Biotech, Central Africa, Disease Control, East Africa, Kenya, PA, Southern Africa, Tanzania, Vaccines Tagged: BMGF, DFID, ECF, GALVmed, ITM, Standard Newspaper (Kenya)

A woman and her cow: Of bovine bank loans and entrepreneurship

Livestock farmer Jinny Lemson brings her cows home to stable in central Malawi

In Khulungira Village, in central Malawi, farmer Jinny Lemson, 32, started acquiring livestock with her husband ten years ago as an investment. Neither grew up with animals. First they bought chickens, then goats, then pigs, sheep, and cows. They also have ducks, cats and dogs. They grow all the feed on their farm. ‘Our life has completely changed. We used to eat meat once a month. Now we’re eating it twice a week, and eggs three times a week. The kids are healthier than before.’ Here she brings her cows in to stable.

The Washington Post has published an opinion piece by Michael Gerson that ostensibly aims to educate its readers on just how US budget cuts could impact poor people struggling to get ahead in poor countries.

To do this, Gerson tells the story of a single Malawian woman, Donata Kuchawo, and her single cow, Zoali (‘a resting place’). It is remarkable how often such a woman or a man ‘and a cow’ stories serve to tell a bigger tale, a tale emblematic of the struggles and successes of poor rural people in poor countries everywhere—and how much these people depend on their ‘livestock assets’ to make a living, and to work themselves out of poverty. Here’s Kuchawo’s story.

‘Donata Kuchawo’s cow pen is as clean as a well-tended garden. She has only one cow, but she owes it a great deal.

‘Before the cow, she scraped by on subsistence farming—exhausting, back-bending work, rewarded only by survival. Her five children spent part of each year hungry.

‘After getting the cow, she could sell its milk at the local dairy cooperative, which provided year-round income. She paid the school fees for her children and bought fertilizer to increase the yield of her maize field. She now employs four people to work her property, grows soybeans, peaches and sugar cane, and raises ducks and five pigs. . . .

‘Despite the varied frustrations of the farmer, her life is now easier than scratching dirt in a field. She named her cow Zoali, which means “a resting place”. . . .

‘About 80 percent of Malawians are farmers. Their nation is one of the world’s most impoverished, mainly because agricultural productivity is poor. . . .

‘The solutions are not complex: higher yielding, disease- and pest-resistant varieties of plants, and fertilizer to improve played-out soil. These are the elements of any green revolution. Income from higher crop productivity can be invested in the purchase of a cow—a local bank offers a three-year bovine loan.

‘A farmer producing milk can go from $300 in annual income to $1,200. . . .

‘The promotion of agriculture—funding research on improved hybrids, training local companies in seed production, providing extension services to farmers—is among the best examples of long-term, bootstrap development. It is the kind of foreign assistance that encourages enterprise and independence, and that avoids the need for emergency famine relief. . . .

‘Donata Kuchawo demonstrates the hidden entrepreneurship found even among the poorest of the poor. Sometimes it only takes a cow to unleash it.’

Read the whole article in the Washington Post: In Malawi, the toll of U.S. budget-cutting, 14 March 2011.


Filed under: Africa, Agriculture, Cattle, Dairying, Livelihoods, Malawi, PA, Pro-Poor Livestock, Southern Africa, Women Tagged: Washington Post

Transforming Mozambique’s poultry sector

Speaking at a recent meeting on the ‘Impact of U.S. Support on Farming, Poverty and Stability in Mozambique’, Florencia Cipriano, Head of Veterinary Services in Mozambique, described the country’s poultry sector transformation.

This transformation included the establishment of the Mozambican Aviculture Association (AMA) that “enabled new poultry farmers to form sustainable businesses, helping them understand government procedures and get access to credit.”

“Thanks to the AMA, local poultry workers have increased their market share from one-third to three-fourths in 2010. The association has created 95,000 new jobs, and Mozambique’s poultry sector is now worth $160 million.”

Read more … (One Blog)

Download her remarks


Filed under: Animal Production, Mozambique, Poultry, Southern Africa Tagged: One Blog, Veterinary services

Plan launched to increase incomes for Tanzanian dairy farmers

Land O’Lakes International Development has launched a new $8 million, three-year USDA-funded dairy development programme in the country that is expected to directly improve incomes and strengthen food security for nearly 18,000 farmers and agricultural input and service providers.

The programme, to be funded by the USAID, will also indirectly benefit an additional 87,000 family members, and raise awareness about the nutritional value of milk among consumers.

Read more … (The Citizen)


Filed under: Africa, Animal Products, Dairying, Livestock, Southern Africa, Tanzania, Value Chains Tagged: Land O' Lakes

Botswana’s cattle industry: an uncertain future despite vaccine breakthrough

One chief facet of the country’s domestic agriculture industry remains cattle raising (though agriculture and livestock production account for between only 2-4% of GDP, while employing approximately 25% of the country’s labor force) and the export of beef to international markets such as the European Union (EU) and South Africa, although production has admittedly sagged in recent years given Foot and Mouth Disease (FMD) outbreaks and the EU’s rigid import criteria (including hormone-free requirements) which does not accept beef exports from FMD-vaccinated areas.

However, the Botswana Vaccine Institute’s (BVI) recent launch of a P200 million production facility capable of producing nearly 24 million mono doses of FMD vaccine annually (the result of a public–private partnership between the state and Paris-based Merial, an animal health subsidiary of Sanofi-Aventis), should help the domestic industry’s competitiveness, per BVI general manager Dr. Onkabetse George Matlho.

Read more … (Botswana Business Diary)


Filed under: Africa, Animal Diseases, Animal Production, Botswana, Disease Control, Livestock, Southern Africa, Vaccines

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