82 research outputs found
Brucellosis in Ethiopia
We reviewed the distribution of brucellosis in different regions of Ethiopia and its prevalence among
different livestock hosts. In the absence of recent published documents, unpublished studies were cited
to provide some information on distribution and importance of brucellosis in Ethiopia. Risk factors for
the occurrence of brucellosis are also reviewed. Finally, different strategies for the control and
prevention of brucellosis under Ethiopian conditions are discussed
Heat Tolerance Responses of Chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.) Genotypes in the Thermal Zone of Ethiopia, a Case of Werer Station
Chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.) is an important cool season food legumes with indeterminate growth habit. The crop is valued for its nutritive seeds and use as animal feed in many developing countries. The productivity of the crop is constrained by several abiotic stresses, among which high temperature is one of the key determinants of crop. The present study was conducted to screen, evaluate and select Chickpea genotypes possessing high yield potential under heat stress condition at Werer Agricultural Research Center. The experiment was laid in RCBD of three replications using eighteen early maturing chickpea genotypes of ICRISAT in 2015. Two times planting (i. e. 23 Jan and 24 February) was done each on 4.8m2 plot with 30cm and 10 cm spacing, and data was determined on the two central rows. Growth period maximum temperature of >35OC, considered threshold for heat assessment, was sufficiently interfaced in both planting days. Combined analysis of variance revealed existence of highly significant differences among the tested genotypes for most of the agronomic traits. The top 3 best performing lines with extra early phenology were ICCV 09309 (1187 kg/ha), ICCV 10103 (1035 kg/ha) and ICCV 10108 (1014 kg/ha). Delayed planting posed more stress on the crop and yield, possibly the increasingly progressing temperature interfered beyond physiological adjustment of the crop. Heat tolerance indices like STI, TOL, SSI, MP and GMP calculated on the basis of grain yield, and genotypes ICCV-10102, ICCV-09309, DZ-2012-CK-0034 and DZ-2012-CK-0041 showed lower TOL and higher STI values indicating as tolerant genotypes relative to others
Short term fallow and partitioning effects of green manures on wheat systems in East African highlands
Soil fertility depletion is a major constraint of smallholder farming in sub-Saharan Africa. We tested the aftereffects
of green manures, namely vetch (Vicia sativa L.), lupin (Lupinus polyphyllus L.), and lablab (Lablab purpureus
L.) incorporated into the soil compared to three fertilizer levels (0/0, 23/0, and 78/20 kg N/P h
Landscape-based nutrient application in wheat and teff mixed farming systems of Ethiopia: farmer and extension agent demand driven approach
Introduction: Adapting fertilizer use is crucial if smallholder agroecosystems are to attain the sustainable development goals of zero hunger and agroecosystem resilience. Poor soil health and nutrient variability characterize the smallholder farming systems. However, the current research at the field scale does not account for nutrient variability across landscape positions, posing significant challenges for targeted nutrient management interventions. The purpose of this research was to create a demand-driven and co-development approach for diagnosing farmer nutrient management practices and determining landscape-specific (hillslope, mid-slope, and foot slope) fertilizer applications for teff and wheat.
Method: A landscape segmentation approach was aimed to address gaps in farm-scale nutrient management research as well as the limitations of blanket recommendations to meet local nutrient requirements. This approach incorporates the concept of interconnected socio-technical systems as well as the concepts and procedures of co-development. A smart mobile app was used by extension agents to generate crop-specific decision rules at the landscape scale and forward the specific fertilizer applications to target farmers through SMS messages or print formats.
Results and discussion: The findings reveal that farmers apply more fertilizer to hillslopes and less to mid- and foot slopes. However, landscape-specific fertilizer application guided by crop-specific decision rules via mobile applications resulted in much higher yield improvements, 23% and 56% at foot slopes and 21% and 6.5% at mid slopes for wheat and teff, respectively. The optimized net benefit per hectare increase over the current extension recommendation was 333 at foot slopes and 64 at mid slopes for wheat and teff (average of 107 for wheat and teff), respectively. The results of the net benefit-to-cost ratio (BCR) demonstrated that applying landscape-targeted fertilizer resulted in an optimum return on investment (1.0 investment) while also enhancing nutrient use efficiency across the three landscape positions. Farmers are now cognizant of the need to reduce fertilizer rates on hillslopes while increasing them on parcels at mid- and foot-slope landscapes, which have higher responses and profits. As a result, applying digital advisory to optimize landscape-targeted fertilizer management gives agronomic, economic, and environmental benefits. The outcomes results of the innovation also contribute to overcoming site-specific yield gaps and low nutrient use efficiency, they have the potential to be scaled if complementing innovations and scaling factors are integrated
Longitudinal river zonation in the tropics: examples of fish and caddisflies from endorheic Awash river, Ethiopia
Primary Research PaperSpecific concepts of fluvial ecology are
well studied in riverine ecosystems of the temperate
zone but poorly investigated in the Afrotropical
region. Hence, we examined the longitudinal zonation
of fish and adult caddisfly (Trichoptera) assemblages
in the endorheic Awash River (1,250 km in length),
Ethiopia. We expected that species assemblages are
structured along environmental gradients, reflecting
the pattern of large-scale freshwater ecoregions. We
applied multivariate statistical methods to test for differences in spatial species assemblage structure and
identified characteristic taxa of the observed biocoenoses
by indicator species analyses. Fish and
caddisfly assemblages were clustered into highland
and lowland communities, following the freshwater
ecoregions, but separated by an ecotone with highest
biodiversity. Moreover, the caddisfly results suggest
separating the heterogeneous highlands into a forested
and a deforested zone. Surprisingly, the Awash
drainage is rather species-poor: only 11 fish (1
endemic, 2 introduced) and 28 caddisfly species (8
new records for Ethiopia) were recorded from the
mainstem and its major tributaries. Nevertheless,
specialized species characterize the highland forests, whereas the lowlands primarily host geographically
widely distributed species. This study showed that a
combined approach of fish and caddisflies is a
suitable method for assessing regional characteristics
of fluvial ecosystems in the tropicsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Bovine trypanosomosis and gastrointestinal helminthosis in settlement villages of Bedele district, South-western Ethiopia
This cross-sectional study was carried out from October 2011 to March 2012 to assess the concurrent infections of bovine trypanosomosis with gastrointestinal (GI) helminthes in Peasant Associations of Bedele district settlement areas located in Illubabor Zone, Southwestern part of Ethiopia. A total of 500 randomly selected cattle were examined using Buffy Coat Technique and coprological examinations. Faecal examination was done by sedimentation and flotation techniques following the standard procedures to identify eggs of parasitic helminthes. Those faecal samples that were positive for flotation technique were subjected to eggs per gram (EPG) count using Mc Master egg counting technique and the degree of infestation was categorized as light, moderate and severe. Out of total cattle examined, 21(4.2%) were positive for Trypanosoma congolense and 321(64.2%) were found to harbor one or more gastrointestinal helminthes infection. Helminthes identified were Fasciola species (51.4%), paramphistomum species (18.7%), the protozoan Eimeria species (6.2%), Trichuris species (6.85%), Trichostrongyles (11 %) and mixed infections (6%). The overall mean PCV value recorded was 26.7±3.9 and it was 26.8±3.9 in trypanosome negative animals and 22.9±3.3 in trypanosome positive animals. The overall mean EPG recorded was 172±99.6. Among 21 cattle found positive for T. congolense, 18 (85.7%) were concurrently infected with (GI) helminthes particularly Fasciolosis (38.1%) and statistically there was significant association (P < 0.05) between trypanososmosis and GI helminthes infection. Age and sex of sampled cattle were not found to influence GI helminthes prevalence (p>0.05). Infection with T. congolense and Fasciola species is the most prevalent form of co-infection in cattle within study areas. In conclusion, any attempts to control or prevent trypanosomosis or GI helminthes infection through different management approaches, need to address the possibility of concurrent infections especially in trypanosomosis endemic areas to save the losses in advance.Key words: Bedele, Cattle, Concurrent, Ethiopia, GI helminthes, Trypanosomosi
- âŠ