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Livestock feed resources and feeding practices in hill farming systems: A review

Indian Agricultural Research Journals

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Title Livestock feed resources and feeding practices in hill farming systems: A review
 
Creator Singh, Vir
Bohra, Babita
 
Subject Common property resources (CPRs); Feed resources; Feeding practices; Fodder calendar; Livestock feeding; Natural resource management; Nutritive value; Uncultivated fodders
 
Description Livestock feed resources and feeding strategies in hill areas are distinguishable from those in the plains. Owing to availability of forests and rangelands under common property resource (CPR) regime in the hills as an integral component of the farming systems, farmers customarily depend uncultivated fodders (tree leaves, grasses and herbaceous plants), rather than on the conventional cultivated fodders. Agroforestry systems supplying tree and shrub leaves and crop residues are the other resource of fodder. More than 4 dozens of woody perennials occurring at various altitudes of the Himalayan mountains are being utilized by the livestock farmers in the region. In addition, there are numerous species of grasses and other herbaceous plants spread in rangelands that also become fodder for livestock. An understanding of the lopping cycle of these fodder-yielding plants is of great value in the management of natural resources. There are several attributes - ecological as well as economic- of uncultivated fodders. Farmers follow a fodder calendar in the feeding of their livestock. Most of the concentrate used is home-produced. Nutritive value and digestibility of certain tree leaves is comparable with that of the conventional cultivated leguminous fodders. Dismal state of livestock feeding is this that livestock in the hills, owing to paucity of green and dry fodders, are under-fed. Feeding strategies of different livestock species are different Ovine spccies are kept on grazing almost exclusively. Special feeding considerations are adopted when cows or buffaloes are in pregnancy and in lactation state and when bullocks are at work. Natural resource management leading to augmentation of fodder supplies and fortification of nutritive value especially of dry fodders would be pivotal in impraving the lot of livestock in the hills.
 
Publisher Directorate of Knowledge Management in Agriculture
 
Date 2005-01-05
 
Type info:eu-repo/semantics/article
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Review Article
 
Format application/pdf
 
Identifier http://epubs.icar.org.in/ejournal/index.php/IJAnS/article/view/9671
 
Source The Indian Journal of Animal Sciences; Vol 75, No 1 (2005)
0367-8318
 
Language eng
 
Relation http://epubs.icar.org.in/ejournal/index.php/IJAnS/article/view/9671/4322
 
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