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Smallholder Livestock Farmers’ Animal Health Management Practices in South Africa

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Climate Change, Agriculture and Society
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Abstract

Primary animal health care is an important ingredient to sustainable and profitable livestock farming. The aim of the study was to investigate the animal health care management practices adopted by smallholder livestock farmers in South Africa. Combinations of multi-stage and stratified sampling techniques were used to select 591 farmers across five provinces in South Africa. The results revealed that farmers employed various primary animal health care practices to prevent diseases. The degree of uptake of the different primary animal health care practices differed across the five provinces. In general, dipping, vaccination and deworming were the most used disease preventative measures while disinfection, isolation and restricted access were the least used disease preventative measures. Although dipping was a common primary animal health care practice, the Free State lagged behind. Membership of livestock association and livestock expenditure were the major drivers of adoption of primary animal health care practices. The study also found that livestock farmers across the provinces were spending a significant amount of household income on primary animal health care. Household livestock management expenditure was influenced by household head education level, income, and herd size. In light of these findings, the study recommends that there should be targeted interventions on primary animal health care (i.e., provision of dipping infrastructure) driven through bottom-up approaches.

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Notes

  1. 1.

    In the Animal Disease Act, animals refer to any mammal, fish, bird, reptile or amphibian.

  2. 2.

    Smallholder farmers are farmers who produce for household consumption, markets and earn revenue from farming business, which form a source of income for the household. This group of farmers has potential to graduate to commercial farming but need access to comprehensive technical and financial support (Carelsen et al., 2021).

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Acknowledgements

The authors would like to acknowledge the cooperation of smallholder livestock farmers across the five provinces in South Africa. The authors also acknowledge all the enumerators who assisted in conducting the interviews.

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Correspondence to P. Tirivanhu .

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Ethical clearance (REC 24/19/02/14) for the study was granted by the Human Sciences Research Council.

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All the authors declare that they have no conflict of interest.

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Maziya, M., Tirivanhu, P., Kajombo, R.J., Gumede, N.A. (2023). Smallholder Livestock Farmers’ Animal Health Management Practices in South Africa. In: Alam, A., Rukhsana (eds) Climate Change, Agriculture and Society. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-28251-5_5

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