Revue d’Elevage et de Médecine Vétérinaire des Pays Tropicaux (Feb 2002)

Demographic Parameters of a Domestic Cattle Herd in a Contagious-Bovine- Pleuropneumonia Infected Area of Ethiopian Highlands

  • M. Lesnoff,
  • M. Diedhiou,
  • G. Laval,
  • P. Bonnet,
  • A. Workalemahu,
  • D. Kifle

DOI
https://doi.org/10.19182/remvt.9834
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 55, no. 2
pp. 139 – 147

Abstract

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Demographic parameters of a cattle (Horro breed) herd in a rural highland district of Ethiopia (Boji, West Wellega) are described. Data were collected in the course of a herd-monitoring project on the spread of contagious bovine pleuropneumonia (CBPP). The mean age at first calving and calving rate (for females older than 4 years) in the monitored herds were estimated at 5.8 years and 0.37 year-1, respectively. The annual natural mortalities were 17, 9 and 3% for calves (0 to 9 months old), subadults (> 9 months to 4 years) and adults (> 4 years), respectively. No effect of the herd status (CBPP-free or CBPP-infected) was observed on the mean mortality of weaned animals. A main feature of cattle management in the area was the common practice of animal lending between farmers (more than 35% of the adults in the monitored herds were loaned during the year), mainly for agricultural activities and manure. This practice may have had a major impact on the observed age structure of the cattle population.

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