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Featured researches published by Nils Teufel.


Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture | 2012

Integrating crops and livestock in subtropical agricultural systems

Iain A. Wright; Shirley A. Tarawali; Michael Blümmel; Bruno Gérard; Nils Teufel; Mario Herrero

As the demand for livestock products increases, and is expected to continue to increase over the next few decades, especially in developing countries, smallholder mixed systems are becoming more intensive. However, with limited land and water resources and concern about the environmental impact of agricultural practices and climate change, the challenge is to find ways of increasing productivity that do not compromise household food security, but rather increase incomes equitably and sustain or enhance the natural resource base. In developed countries there has been increased specialisation of crop and livestock production. In contrast, the majority of livestock in developing countries is kept in mixed crop/livestock systems. Crops (cereal grains and pulses) and crop residues provide the basis of the diet for animals, e.g. cereal straw fed to dairy cattle or sweet potato vines fed to pigs. Animal manure can provide significant nutrient inputs to crops. Water productivity is higher in mixed crop/livestock systems compared with growing crops alone. Mixed systems allow for a more flexible and profitable use of family labour where employment opportunities are limited. They also spread risks across several enterprises, a consideration in smallholder systems that may become even more important under certain climate change scenarios. Integrated crop/livestock systems can play a significant role in improving global food security but will require appropriate technological developments, institutional arrangements and supportive policy environments if they are to fulfil that potential in the coming decades.


Experimental Agriculture | 2011

THE PARADOX OF LIMITED MAIZE STOVER USE IN INDIA'S SMALLHOLDER CROP-LIVESTOCK SYSTEMS

Olaf Erenstein; Arindam Samaddar; Nils Teufel; Michael Blümmel

SUMMARY Cereal residues are an important feed source for ruminants in smallholder crop-livestock systems in the (sub)tropics. In many areas of India maize is a relatively new cash crop where farmers and development agents alike generally perceive maize stover to have limited utility, in contrast with the intensive feeding of other cereal residues in India and the intensive use of maize stover in sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America. A comparative assessment of maize stover quality (based on a brief review and a feeding trial) indeed confirms its potential as a ruminant feed according to its relative nutritive value. The paper then explores the apparent paradox through a scoping study of maize stover use (based on village surveys) in three contrasting maize-growing districts in India – including both traditional and non-traditional maize producers. The limited maize stover use appears to alleviate seasonal shortages, with tradition and technology helping explain the preferential use of other cereal residues. The paper thereby provides further impetus to India’s apparent food-feed paradigm – whereby farmers’ staple food preferences coincide with crop residue feed preferences. The paper argues the case for investing in maize stover R&D in India and thus reigniting earlier feed research in general. Indeed, maize stover use is a relatively neglected area by India’s agricultural R&D and merits more attention so as to exploit its potential contribution and alleviate eventual tradeoffs.


Food Security | 2017

Is production intensification likely to make farm households food-adequate? A simple food availability analysis across smallholder farming systems from East and West Africa

Randall S. Ritzema; Romain Frelat; Sabine Douxchamps; Silvia Silvestri; Mariana C. Rufino; Mario Herrero; Ken E. Giller; Santiago Lopez-Ridaura; Nils Teufel; Birthe K. Paul; M.T. van Wijk

Despite considerable development investment, food insecurity remains prevalent throughout East and West Africa. The concept of ‘sustainable intensification’ of agricultural production has been promoted as a means to meet growing food needs in these regions. However, inadequate attention has been given to assessing whether benefits from intensification would be realized by farm households considering highly diverse resource endowments, household and farm characteristics, and agroecological contexts. In this study, we apply a simple energy-based index of food availability to 1800 households from research sites in 7 countries in East and West Africa to assess the food availability status of each of these households and to quantify the contribution of different on- and off-farm activities to food availability. We estimate the effects of two production intensification strategies on food availability: increased cereal crop production from crop-based options, and increased production of key livestock products from livestock-based options. These two options are contrasted with a third strategy: increased off-farm income for each household from broader socioeconomic-based options. Using sensitivity analysis, each strategy is tested against baseline values via incremental production increases. Baseline results exhibit considerable diversity within and across sites in household food availability status and livelihood strategies. Interventions represented in the crop and livestock options may primarily benefit food-adequate and marginally food-inadequate households, and have little impact on the most food-inadequate households. The analysis questions what production intensification can realistically achieve for East and West African smallholders, and how intensification strategies must be augmented with transformational strategies to reach the poorest households.


Animal | 2013

Dairy intensification in developing countries: Effects of market quality on farm-level feeding and breeding practices

Alan J. Duncan; Nils Teufel; Kindu Mekonnen; V.K. Singh; A. Bitew; Berhanu Gebremedhin

Smallholder dairy production represents a promising income generating activity for poor farmers in the developing world. Because of the perishable nature of milk, marketing arrangements for collection, distribution and sale are important for enhanced livelihoods in the smallholder dairy sector. In this study we examined the relationship between market quality and basic feeding and breeding practices at farm level. We define market quality as the attractiveness and reliability of procurement channels and associated input supply arrangements. We took as our study countries, India with its well-developed smallholder dairy sector, and Ethiopia where the smallholder dairy industry has remained relatively undeveloped despite decades of development effort. We conducted village surveys among producer groups in 90 villages across three States in India and two Regions in Ethiopia. Producer groups were stratified according to three levels of market quality – high, medium and low. Data showed that diet composition was relatively similar in India and Ethiopia with crop residues forming the major share of the diet. Concentrate feeding tended to be more prominent in high market quality sites. Herd composition changed with market quality with more dairy (exotic) cross-bred animals in high market quality sites in both India and Ethiopia. Cross-bred animals were generally more prominent in India than Ethiopia. Herd performance within breed did not change a great deal along the market quality gradient. Parameters such as calving interval and milk yield were relatively insensitive to market quality. Insemination of cross-bred cows was predominantly by artificial insemination (AI) in India and accounted for around half of cross-bred cow inseminations in Ethiopia. Data on perceptions of change over the last decade indicated that per herd and per cow productivity are both increasing in high market quality sites with a more mixed picture in medium and low-quality sites. Similarly dairy-derived income is on the increase in high market quality sites. This is accompanied by a strong increase in stall feeding at the expense of grazing. The study indicates that the first constraint to intensification of dairy production in Ethiopia is the genetic quality of the herd. There is less scope for improved AI provision in India since the cross-bred herd is mainly serviced by AI already. However, as for Ethiopia, there is considerable scope for closing yield gaps in India through improved feed use and supply. Results strongly show that well-developed markets with good procurement arrangements are key for sustainable dairy intensification.


Field Crops Research | 2012

Conservation agriculture in mixed crop-livestock systems: Scoping crop residue trade-offs in Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia

Diego Valbuena; Olaf Erenstein; Sabine Homann-Kee Tui; Tahirou Abdoulaye; L. Claessens; Alan J. Duncan; Bruno Gérard; Mariana C. Rufino; Nils Teufel; Andre F. van Rooyen; Mark T. van Wijk


Agricultural Systems | 2015

Identifying determinants, pressures and trade-offs of crop residue use in mixed smallholder farms in Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia

Diego Valbuena; Sabine Homann-Kee Tui; Olaf Erenstein; Nils Teufel; Alan J. Duncan; Tahirou Abdoulaye; Braja Bandhu Swain; Kindu Mekonnen; Ibro Germaine; Bruno Gérard


Agricultural Systems | 2017

The Rural Household Multi-Indicator Survey (RHoMIS) for rapid characterisation of households to inform climate smart agriculture interventions: Description and applications in East Africa and Central America

James Hammond; Simon Fraval; Jacob van Etten; José G. Suchini; Leida Mercado; Tim Pagella; Romain Frelat; Mats Lannerstad; Sabine Douxchamps; Nils Teufel; Diego Valbuena; Mark T. van Wijk


Climate Research | 2009

Vulnerability of smallholder farmers to ENSO-related drought in Indonesia

Alwin Keil; Nils Teufel; Dodo Gunawan; Constanze Leemhuis


Archive | 2010

Dual-purpose crop development, fodder trading and processing options for improved feed value chains

Michael Blümmel; Shirley A. Tarawali; Nils Teufel; Iain A. Wright


Agricultural Systems | 2018

Livelihoods and food security in an urban linked, high potential region of Tanzania: Changes over a three year period

Simon Fraval; Jim Hammond; Mats Lannerstad; S.J. Oosting; George Sayula; Nils Teufel; Silvia Silvestri; E. Jane Poole; Mario Herrero; Mark T. van Wijk

Collaboration


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Dhiraj Kumar Singh

International Livestock Research Institute

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Isabelle Baltenweck

International Livestock Research Institute

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Mark T. van Wijk

International Livestock Research Institute

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Mario Herrero

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Olaf Erenstein

International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center

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Iain A. Wright

International Livestock Research Institute

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Silvia Silvestri

International Livestock Research Institute

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Michael Blümmel

International Livestock Research Institute

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