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Characterizing Ethiopian cattle production systems for disease burden analysis

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Characterizing Ethiopian cattle production systems for disease burden analysis. / Li, Yin; Mayberry, Dianne; Jemberu, Wudu et al.
In: Frontiers in Veterinary Science, Vol. 10, 1233474, 28.09.2023.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Li, Y, Mayberry, D, Jemberu, W, Schrobback, P, Herrero, M, Chaters, G, Knight-Jones, T & Rushton, J 2023, 'Characterizing Ethiopian cattle production systems for disease burden analysis', Frontiers in Veterinary Science, vol. 10, 1233474. https://doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2023.1233474

APA

Li, Y., Mayberry, D., Jemberu, W., Schrobback, P., Herrero, M., Chaters, G., Knight-Jones, T., & Rushton, J. (2023). Characterizing Ethiopian cattle production systems for disease burden analysis. Frontiers in Veterinary Science, 10, Article 1233474. https://doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2023.1233474

Vancouver

Li Y, Mayberry D, Jemberu W, Schrobback P, Herrero M, Chaters G et al. Characterizing Ethiopian cattle production systems for disease burden analysis. Frontiers in Veterinary Science. 2023 Sept 28;10:1233474. doi: 10.3389/fvets.2023.1233474

Author

Li, Yin ; Mayberry, Dianne ; Jemberu, Wudu et al. / Characterizing Ethiopian cattle production systems for disease burden analysis. In: Frontiers in Veterinary Science. 2023 ; Vol. 10.

Bibtex

@article{0a22d01019e24142aa9a63fbd85b1b7d,
title = "Characterizing Ethiopian cattle production systems for disease burden analysis",
abstract = "This paper addresses knowledge gaps in the biomass, productivity and value of livestock for the pastoral, mixed crop-livestock and specialized dairy systems in Ethiopia. Population size, reproductive performance, mortality, offtake and productivity of cattle were calculated from official statistics and a meta-analysis of data available in the published literature. This information was then used to estimate biomass and output value for 2020 using a herd dynamics model. The mixed-crop livestock system dominates the Ethiopian cattle sector, with 55 million cattle (78% total population) and contributing 8.52 billion USD to the economy through the provision of meat, milk, hides and draft power in 2021. By comparison, the pastoral (13.4 million head) and specialized dairy (1.8 million head) systems are much smaller. Productivity varied between different production systems, with differences in live body weight, productivity and prices from different sources. The estimated total cattle biomass was 14.8 billion kg in 2021, i.e., 11.3 billion kg in the mixed crop-livestock system, 2.60 billion kg in the pastoral system and 0.87 billion kg in the specialized dairy system. The total economic asset values of cattle in the mixed crop-livestock, pastoral and specialized dairy systems were estimated as 24.8, 5.28 and 1.37 billion USD, respectively. The total combined output value (e.g., beef, milk and draft power) of cattle production was 11.9 billion USD, which was 11.2% of the GDP in Ethiopia in 2021. This work quantifies the importance of cattle in the Ethiopian economy. These estimates of herd structure, reproductive performance, productivity, biomass, and economic value for cattle production systems in Ethiopia can be used to inform high-level policy, revealing under-performance and areas to prioritize and provide a basis for further technical analysis, such as disease burden.",
author = "Yin Li and Dianne Mayberry and Wudu Jemberu and Peggy Schrobback and Mario Herrero and Gemma Chaters and Theodore Knight-Jones and Jonathan Rushton",
year = "2023",
month = sep,
day = "28",
doi = "10.3389/fvets.2023.1233474",
language = "English",
volume = "10",
journal = "Frontiers in Veterinary Science",
issn = "2297-1769",
publisher = "Frontiers Media S.A.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Characterizing Ethiopian cattle production systems for disease burden analysis

AU - Li, Yin

AU - Mayberry, Dianne

AU - Jemberu, Wudu

AU - Schrobback, Peggy

AU - Herrero, Mario

AU - Chaters, Gemma

AU - Knight-Jones, Theodore

AU - Rushton, Jonathan

PY - 2023/9/28

Y1 - 2023/9/28

N2 - This paper addresses knowledge gaps in the biomass, productivity and value of livestock for the pastoral, mixed crop-livestock and specialized dairy systems in Ethiopia. Population size, reproductive performance, mortality, offtake and productivity of cattle were calculated from official statistics and a meta-analysis of data available in the published literature. This information was then used to estimate biomass and output value for 2020 using a herd dynamics model. The mixed-crop livestock system dominates the Ethiopian cattle sector, with 55 million cattle (78% total population) and contributing 8.52 billion USD to the economy through the provision of meat, milk, hides and draft power in 2021. By comparison, the pastoral (13.4 million head) and specialized dairy (1.8 million head) systems are much smaller. Productivity varied between different production systems, with differences in live body weight, productivity and prices from different sources. The estimated total cattle biomass was 14.8 billion kg in 2021, i.e., 11.3 billion kg in the mixed crop-livestock system, 2.60 billion kg in the pastoral system and 0.87 billion kg in the specialized dairy system. The total economic asset values of cattle in the mixed crop-livestock, pastoral and specialized dairy systems were estimated as 24.8, 5.28 and 1.37 billion USD, respectively. The total combined output value (e.g., beef, milk and draft power) of cattle production was 11.9 billion USD, which was 11.2% of the GDP in Ethiopia in 2021. This work quantifies the importance of cattle in the Ethiopian economy. These estimates of herd structure, reproductive performance, productivity, biomass, and economic value for cattle production systems in Ethiopia can be used to inform high-level policy, revealing under-performance and areas to prioritize and provide a basis for further technical analysis, such as disease burden.

AB - This paper addresses knowledge gaps in the biomass, productivity and value of livestock for the pastoral, mixed crop-livestock and specialized dairy systems in Ethiopia. Population size, reproductive performance, mortality, offtake and productivity of cattle were calculated from official statistics and a meta-analysis of data available in the published literature. This information was then used to estimate biomass and output value for 2020 using a herd dynamics model. The mixed-crop livestock system dominates the Ethiopian cattle sector, with 55 million cattle (78% total population) and contributing 8.52 billion USD to the economy through the provision of meat, milk, hides and draft power in 2021. By comparison, the pastoral (13.4 million head) and specialized dairy (1.8 million head) systems are much smaller. Productivity varied between different production systems, with differences in live body weight, productivity and prices from different sources. The estimated total cattle biomass was 14.8 billion kg in 2021, i.e., 11.3 billion kg in the mixed crop-livestock system, 2.60 billion kg in the pastoral system and 0.87 billion kg in the specialized dairy system. The total economic asset values of cattle in the mixed crop-livestock, pastoral and specialized dairy systems were estimated as 24.8, 5.28 and 1.37 billion USD, respectively. The total combined output value (e.g., beef, milk and draft power) of cattle production was 11.9 billion USD, which was 11.2% of the GDP in Ethiopia in 2021. This work quantifies the importance of cattle in the Ethiopian economy. These estimates of herd structure, reproductive performance, productivity, biomass, and economic value for cattle production systems in Ethiopia can be used to inform high-level policy, revealing under-performance and areas to prioritize and provide a basis for further technical analysis, such as disease burden.

U2 - 10.3389/fvets.2023.1233474

DO - 10.3389/fvets.2023.1233474

M3 - Journal article

VL - 10

JO - Frontiers in Veterinary Science

JF - Frontiers in Veterinary Science

SN - 2297-1769

M1 - 1233474

ER -