G. Taddesse
International Livestock Research Institute
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Publication
Featured researches published by G. Taddesse.
Rangeland Journal | 2009
Donald G. Peden; G. Taddesse; Amare Haileslassie
Water is essential for agriculture including livestock. Given increasing global concern that access to agricultural water will constrain food production and that livestock production uses and degrades too much water, there is compelling need for better understanding of the nature of livestock–water interactions. Inappropriate animal management along with poor cropping practices often contributes to widespread and severe depletion, degradation and contamination of water. In developed countries, diverse environmental organisations increasingly voice concerns that animal production is a major cause of land and water degradation. Thus, they call for reduced animal production. Such views generally fail to consider their context, applicability and implications for developing countries. Two global research programs, the CGIAR ‘Comprehensive Assessment of Water Management and Agriculture’ and ‘Challenge Program on Water and Food’ have undertaken studies of the development, management and conservation of agricultural water in developing countries. Drawing on these programs, this paper describes a framework to systematically identify key livestock–water interactions and suggests strategies for improving livestock and water management especially in the mixed crop–livestock production systems of sub-Saharan Africa. In contrast to developed country experience, this research suggests that currently livestock water productivity compares favourably with crop water productivity in Africa. Yet, great opportunities remain to further reduce domestic animals’ use of water in the continent. Integrating livestock and water planning, development and management has the potential to help reduce poverty, increase food production and reduce pressure on the environment including scarce water resources. Four strategies involving technology, policy and institutional interventions can help achieve this. They are choosing feeds that require relatively little water, conserving water resources through better animal and land management, applying well known tools from the animal sciences to increase animal production, and strategic temporal and spatial provisioning of drinking water. Achieving integrated livestock–water development will require new ways of thinking about, and managing, water by water- and animal-science professionals.
Rangeland Journal | 2009
Amare Haileslassie; Donald G. Peden; S. Gebreselassie; Tilahun Amede; A. Wagnew; G. Taddesse
A recent study of the livestock water productivity (LWP), at higher spatial scales in the Blue Nile Basin, indicated strong variability across regions. To get an insight into the causes of this variability, we examined the effect of farm households’ access to productive resources (e.g. land, livestock) on LWP in potato–barley, barley–wheat, teff–millet and rice farming systems of the Gumera watershed (in the Blue Nile Basin, Ethiopia). We randomly selected 180 farm households. The sizes of the samples, in each system, were proportional to the respective system’s area. Then we grouped the samples, using a participatory wealth ranking method, into three wealth groups (rich, medium and poor) and used structured and pre-tested questionnaires to collect data on crops and livestock management and applied reference evapotranspiration (ET0) and crop coefficient (Kc) approaches to estimate depleted (evapotranspiration) water in producing animal feed and food crops. Then, we estimated LWP as a ratio of livestock’s beneficial outputs to water depleted. Our results suggest strong variability of LWP across the different systems: ranging between 0.3 and 0.6 US
Conference Papers | 2008
M. Tulu; Eline Boelee; G. Taddesse; Donald G. Peden; D. Aredo
m−3 year−1. The tendency across different farming systems was comparable with results from previous studies at higher spatial scales. The range among different wealth groups was wider (0.1 to 0.6 US
Archive | 2009
M. Alemayehu; Donald G. Peden; G. Taddesse; A. Haileselassie; W. Ayalneh
m−3 year−1) than among the farming systems. This implies that aggregating water productivity (to a system scale) masks hotspots and bright spots. Our result also revealed a positive trend between water productivity (LWP and crop water productivity, CWP) and farm households’ access to resources. Thus, we discuss our findings in relation to poverty alleviation and integrated land and water management to combat unsustainable water management practices in the Blue Nile Basin.
Archive | 2008
Donald G. Peden; Tilahun Amede; Amare Haileslassie; G. Taddesse
Archive | 2008
Donald G. Peden; M. Alemayehu; Tilahun Amede; H. Faki; Amare Haileslassie; Mario Herrero; Denis Mpairwe; G. Taddesse; P. van Breugel
Archive | 2008
Donald G. Peden; H. Faki; M. Alemayehu; Denis Mpairwe; Mario Herrero; P. van Breugel; Amare Haileslassie; G. Taddesse; Seleshi Bekele Awulachew
Archive | 2004
G. Taddesse; Peter G. McCornick; Donald G. Peden
Archive | 2008
Donald G. Peden; Amare Haileslassie; Denis Mpairwe; G. Taddesse; H. Faki; M. Alemayehu; P. van Breugel; A. Amede
Archive | 2006
Donald G. Peden; Mario Herrero; G. Taddesse; David Molden
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Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
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