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Goat Production and Fodder Leaves Offered by Local Villagers in the Mid-Hills of Nepal

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Abstract

More than 50% of Nepal’s population lives in the hill regions, usually with small land holdings, and over 60% are considered below the poverty line. Livestock, and particularly goats, provide these small-scale farmers with about 55% of their on-farm income. We studied goat production in Katteldanda, a mid-hill village of 78 households, mainly Brahmins, in Ghorka District. Subsistence farmers raise six or seven goats and one or two buffalo, and cultivate mainly maize, millet and rice. Tree fodder constituted about 70% of dry matter intake of goats for large parts of the year and was collected by lopping branches from trees on upland, rain-watered, private terraces (bari) near the household compound. Local farmers ranked the fodder trees they considered best and we measured the actual fodder they offered to goats. In addition, we evaluated and ranked 23 fodder species on the basis of laboratory in vitro nutritional and metabolizable energy yields. Using a Mantel test, a significant correlation was found between what the farmers thought was best fodder and fodder offered to goats (Mantel r = 0.398; P = 0.037) but non-significant correlations were found between either what the farmers thought was best fodder or fodder offered to goats and laboratory rankings (Mantel r = −0.027; P = 0.49 and Mantel r = 0.187; P = 0.18, respectively). We concluded that biomass produced and availability throughout the year, in addition to nutritional and energy yield, are important criteria for selecting fodder trees for goat production.

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Notes

  1. Nepal has five development regions with a total of 75 districts. Districts are divided into Village Development Committees (VDC), of which there are 3,914. In turn, each VDC is divided into nine wards.

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Acknowedgements

We thank Nhuchhe Lal Tamraker for help with all aspects of the research, Raj Kumar Jha for fodder sample analyses, Basanta Shrestha, Sanjeev Panday, Prajwal Regmi, Rameshwor Kattel, Kapil Kattel and Keshab Achami for data collection. We also thank the staff at Department of Livestock Services Office (DLSO) at Ghorkha Bazaar for their advice, information, help with the measurements and disseminating the results to other villages, and Bishnu Rana Magar and Roger W. Benjamin for providing helpful discussions. We thank two anonymous reviewers for their very constructive comments and Abdullah Abou-Rachbah who took care of the goats for in vitro studies. Special thanks to all the farmers in Katteldanda for their participation in the project, their cooperation and their warm hospitality. The research was funded by the US-Israel Cooperative Development Research Program, Office of the Science Advisor, United States Agency for International Development (USAID), under Grant Number TA-MOU-00-C17-014.

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Correspondence to A. Allan Degen.

Appendix 1

Appendix 1

  Fodder leaves per household per month offered to goats by farmers. Ranking is based on the total biomass (kg) offered

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Degen, A.A., Pandey, L.N., Kam, M. et al. Goat Production and Fodder Leaves Offered by Local Villagers in the Mid-Hills of Nepal. Hum Ecol 38, 625–637 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10745-010-9342-2

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