Management of Pastoral Development in the Third WorldStudy of agricultural development and rural development among indigenous communitys that derive their livelihood from raising livestock on rangeland in developing countries - discusses nomadism, migration to find better grazing, and land settlement; covers the development of water supply, agricultural management, land utilization, productivity, improvements in animal production, agricultural marketing, and meat processing; considers agricultural policy options. Bibliography. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 43
Page 13
Stephen Sandford. man is likely to modify the climax vegetation , and unless man can use vegetation there may be little reason to conserve it . The climax vegetation in many areas is unproductive bush and it is only heavy use by man and ...
Stephen Sandford. man is likely to modify the climax vegetation , and unless man can use vegetation there may be little reason to conserve it . The climax vegetation in many areas is unproductive bush and it is only heavy use by man and ...
Page 103
... vegetation which is both palatable and rich in energy and protein . Obtaining for their livestock an adequate and timely supply of minerals , either through the vegetation or directly at ' salty wells ' or ' salt licks ' is also a ...
... vegetation which is both palatable and rich in energy and protein . Obtaining for their livestock an adequate and timely supply of minerals , either through the vegetation or directly at ' salty wells ' or ' salt licks ' is also a ...
Page 158
... vegetation types . They are cheaper to put in and for officials in their vehicles to inspect than are ragged boundaries ; but from the point of view of manipulating pasture productivity they are less suitable . In centrally managed ...
... vegetation types . They are cheaper to put in and for officials in their vehicles to inspect than are ragged boundaries ; but from the point of view of manipulating pasture productivity they are less suitable . In centrally managed ...
Contents
The state of the rangelands | 11 |
Chapter two Objectives strategies and instruments | 20 |
Some strategies | 30 |
Copyright | |
18 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
abattoirs acaricides activities administrative Africa agencies allocation animal health appropriate boreholes Botswana cattle cent central government chapter clan components costs countries desertification development programmes discussed district level economic effective Ethiopia example facilities feedlots forage functions government's grazing pressure group ranches health and husbandry herd improving individual interests interventions involved Iran Ivory Coast Kenya kmĀ² labour land land-use less livestock assistants livestock numbers livestock requisites Maasai marketing systems ment Mongolia negdels Nigeria nomadic non-pastoral number of livestock officials operations options organization and management organizational organizations of pastoralists output particular partly pastoral areas pastoral development pastoral groups pastoral situations pastoral society planning political population procedures productivity rainfall range management rangelands relatively role Sandford social Somalia staff structure Sudan Tanzania technical tend traders traditional transport Upper Volta vaccination vegetation veterinary services water points water supplies West Africa