Poked and prodded, the Ankole await action

I’m not sure that the letter to the editor 1 written by LIFE Network and League for Pastoral Peoples staff and entitled “Efforts to save Uganda’s unique Ankole cattle must be stepped up, so that its keepers can benefit” and recently posted on DAD-Net will be as widely available as it merits, so I’ll reproduce a good chunk of it here.

Uganda’s world famous Ankole cow is threatened with extinction unless there is a coordinated effort to prevent its cross-breeding with exotic cattle, and land is set aside for grazing. This is the conclusion of a team of experts of the LIFE Network that recently toured the Ankole breeding tract. The LIFE Network is a group of organisations that support community-based conservation of indigenous livestock breeds…

At a meeting with women dairy producers held in Nyabushozi county, Kiruhura district, it became clear that the cross breeds come with their own set of problems. According to the women, they are very susceptible to diseases and can die quickly without much prior indication. There is a continuous need for medication and treatment. And selling milk, while it generates some much needed cash income, is also fraught with problems, as there is no guaranteed market and prices fluctuate seasonally. During the rainy season, not all milk may be accepted and instead poured away by the dairy company.

There are also fears about environmental damage by the cross-breeds. Their grazing behaviour is different – they crop the grass in a very intense manner. Furthermore, their skins and eyes get easily injured by the thorny bushes, so farmers have started to uproot these, essentially changing the plant cover. Also, the need for frequent dosing with medicines results in chemical residues in milk and meat…

Ms. Katushabe notes that there are a number of efforts to conserve Ankole cattle. The actors involved include “traditionalists”, private entrepreneurs like Dr. Sam Mugasi and some dedicated Ankole cattle keepers that have obtained access to common grazing land. But these efforts lack coordination, and a concerted effort to prevent further uncontrolled cross-breeding. Even the Uganda Wildlife Authority has initiated a project to integrate Ankole cattle into the management of the Lake Mburo National Park; however, here the prime purpose seems to be the enhancement of the attraction of the park for tourists rather than conserving the breed…

“Conservation” may, in fact, not be the key to saving the Ankole cow for posterity. “We need to develop the Ankole breed rather than conserve it”, states Dr. Jacob Wanyama, who coordinates the African LIFE Network. “By means of selective breeding, it would be possible to gradually raise the milk yield while retaining the favourable characteristics of the breed. Such an approach would involve organising the keepers of pure Ankole cattle into a breeders’ association and registering the pure bred animals.” This would also lay the foundation for enabling the livestock keepers to eventually benefit from the unique quality of their animals’ products. For instance the meat is said to be low in cholesterol and extremely tasty. But currently it is marketed generically, and the consumer has no way of knowing what type of meat is on offer. Providing products from pure-bred Ankole cattle with a special stamp or seal that identifies it as such could help generate increased revenues for its keepers, many of whom are poor.

As chance would have it, there’s a paper on the Ankole in the latest issue of Animal Genetic Resources. And the technical complexities that may be involved in developing the breed — any breed — in Africa are outlined in a recent ILRI presentation. The LIFE Network, the League for Pastoral Peoples and the Pastoral and Environmental Network in the Horn of Africa have been working on the Ankole for a while now, and so have ILRI and others. So what now?

Wanna talk to a coconut expert?

Via the Coconut Google Group, Coconutexperts.com
have announced that they are planning to interview Dr V. Arunachalam, Principal Scientist (Horticulture) and section-in-charge of the Indian Council of Agricultural Research institute in Goa. Dr Arunachalam has wide experience in horticulture, plantation crops, plant genetic resources, cropping systems, biotechnology and bioinformatics.

If you are interested in any specific topic or subject which requires clarifications or information, please send an email to admin-at-coconutexperts.com or coconutexperts-at-gmail.com. We will make sure to include your questions during our interview. We will publish the interview script in our Web site. The interview is tentatively scheduled on 8 June, 2011. Please make sure send your questions before 8th June.

An interesting initiative.

The mother-in-law and the Useful Tree Species for Africa

ICRAF have a nifty new tool out called “Useful Tree Species for Africa.” I’ve been playing around with it and I have to say it’s impressive. Not altogether easy to use, but impressive. If you’re at all into using native trees in Africa — for whatever reason or purpose — you’ll want to explore it. Here’s a taste of what it can do.

You download the kmz files from the ICRAF website and open them in Google Earth. 2 Then you think of somewhere you’re interested in. In my case, as usual in these situations, I chose the site of the mother-in-law’s spread above Limuru in Kenya. Useful Tree Species for Africa first tells you what sort of vegetation is potentially found there, according to White’s iconic Vegetation Map of Africa.

In this case, it’s “M19a Undifferentiated Afromontane vegetation (viii AMCE)”. What does that mean? Well, there’s a hyperlink which gives you more information on Mapping Unit 19a:

Crucially, this page, which opens in Google Earth, includes more hyperlinks, to four different species tables. Say you are interested in tree species found in this sort of vegetation that can support honey production. You click on the hyperlink labelled “Mapping unit 19a_uses.xls.” That in turn opens an Excel spreadsheet with a list of about 50 tree species and lots of different types of uses. You sort the species on “Bee fodder” and you get a shortlist of about 17 species, from Albizia gummifera to Syzygium guineense. Clicking yet again, this time on the species name, takes you to the PROTA page on the tree, with lots more information. Now, what would be really cool in due course would be a cross-link to ICRAF’s Tree Seed Suppliers Directory, so that you could work out where to get seed of your useful tree.

As I say, nifty. Lots of clicking, and opening of webpages, and of spreadsheets, and of more webpages, but you do end up with the information you want. If your query is place-based rather than species-based, that is. I don’t think the tool will let you start with a useful tree and work out where you can grow it, rather than start with a place and work out what can grow there. But let me play around with it a bit more. Maybe I’m wrong.