41 research outputs found

    Analysis of agribusiness value chains servicing small-holder dairy farming communities in Punjab, Pakistan: three case studies

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    The agriculture sector in Pakistan, as in most developing countries, is dominated by smallholder producers. Pakistan has the world’s third largest dairy industry, and milk is efficiently collected and distributed chiefly by informal value chains that market the raw product with minimal cool chain infrastructure. Formal processors have a small market share of 5%. Interview data from farmers, milk collectors and consumers from three rural-urban case study value chains were analysed to study opportunities and challenges faced by the dairy industry. Compositional analysis of milk samples (n=84) collected along these chains identified the fact that in Pakistan informal milk chains provide a cheaper source of calories for the final consumer than industrialised milk chains (USD 0.12 compared USD 0.15 per 100 calories). These three chains created an estimated 4,872 jobs from farm to market and provided access to interest-free credit for the farmers. The existing government price setting mechanism at the retail end and collusion by large processors to set farm gate prices provided significant limitations to the profitability of small-holder farms providing the product. The absence of quality and quantity standards, amid the exchange of huge numbers of small volumes of milk along these chains, are major impediments to industry growth

    Dairying and whole-farm economics of crop-livestock farming systems - comparing arid and irrigated districts of Punjab, Pakistan

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    Dairying is an important component of Pakistan’s mixed crop-livestock farming systems. The national economy engages some 8.8 million small-scale producer households. The country produces more milk than any other except for the United States and India. Yet little is known about small-scale producer microeconomics to inform policy development for improving their welfare. In this paper we aim to identify the whole farm profitability of small agricultural households, with a specific focus on milk production. We compare two contrasting agro-ecological regions within Pakistan’s Punjab (irrigated Okara and rain-fed Bhakkar) using results for a single 2008-09 fiscal year of production for 212 farms. Net farm profits, taking long-run opportunity costs of labour and capital into account, showed only 10 per cent of these farms to be profitable in either district, though short-run profits, accounting for cash costs only, showed positive whole farm gross margins for 90 per cent and 80 per cent of farms in Okara and Bhakkar, respectively. The returns on assets (at 2.78 per cent and 0.53 per cent for the two districts) was lower than the national average return on savings (9 per cent). For dairy enterprises, total costs were higher than incomes; so many farms (70 per cent and 60 per cent, respectively) were assessed as making losses. Given the low opportunity costs of feeds (often crop residues) and of labour (6.2 per cent unemployment) and the high rate of inflation (11.8 per cent), returns on factors of production including labour and capital, may not be lower than international standards. There is a need, however, to raise the dairy industry’s overall productivity to make dairying viable; and to identify an optimal land and livestock combination that is profitable and commercially viable

    Balancing international trade and local production for food and nutrition security: animal-sourced foods’ contribution to human welfare

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    Animal-sourced foods make a valuable contribution to the diets of consumers from countries across the economic development spectrum. They provide essential micronutrients including iron, vitamin A, vitamin B12, iodine, and zinc, to balance diets which, apart from vitamin B12, are more bioavailable than in plant-sourced foods. This is important for consumers with high needs including young children, pregnant and lactating women, and malnourished people. Although international trade has great potential to distribute animal products to satisfy global food demand, current trade flows are not achieving this goal in many low and lower middle-income countries. Multilateral efforts, supported by high-income countries, are needed to orientate international trade systems to provide better food and nutrition security. The continuity of trade in filling nutrient deficiencies is often disrupted in times of economic depression, conflict, or natural disaster. Suppliers can retain food resources for their own consumers, while in low-income countries most consumers can ill-afford expensive imports. Stability in most countries’ supply of animal-sourced foods must rely on the resourcefulness of domestic family-based farmers, who produce up to 80% of the world’s food. While encouraging the international trade of animal-sourced foods, governments need to ensure that they develop policies that support these local production units to remain profitable to meet domestic consumption needs. These policies must be developed in the context of the UN’s doctrine of a Right to Food designed to ensure individual countries provide good governance and resources to minimize hunger and poverty

    Novos registros na distribuição geogråfica de anuros na floresta com araucåria e consideraçÔes sobre suas vocalizaçÔes

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    Post-acute COVID-19 neuropsychiatric symptoms are not associated with ongoing nervous system injury

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    A proportion of patients infected with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 experience a range of neuropsychiatric symptoms months after infection, including cognitive deficits, depression and anxiety. The mechanisms underpinning such symptoms remain elusive. Recent research has demonstrated that nervous system injury can occur during COVID-19. Whether ongoing neural injury in the months after COVID-19 accounts for the ongoing or emergent neuropsychiatric symptoms is unclear. Within a large prospective cohort study of adult survivors who were hospitalized for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 infection, we analysed plasma markers of nervous system injury and astrocytic activation, measured 6 months post-infection: neurofilament light, glial fibrillary acidic protein and total tau protein. We assessed whether these markers were associated with the severity of the acute COVID-19 illness and with post-acute neuropsychiatric symptoms (as measured by the Patient Health Questionnaire for depression, the General Anxiety Disorder assessment for anxiety, the Montreal Cognitive Assessment for objective cognitive deficit and the cognitive items of the Patient Symptom Questionnaire for subjective cognitive deficit) at 6 months and 1 year post-hospital discharge from COVID-19. No robust associations were found between markers of nervous system injury and severity of acute COVID-19 (except for an association of small effect size between duration of admission and neurofilament light) nor with post-acute neuropsychiatric symptoms. These results suggest that ongoing neuropsychiatric symptoms are not due to ongoing neural injury

    Eastern grey kangaroo (Macropus giganteus) myofibres. 2. Characteristics of eight skeletal muscles

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    The myofibre characteristics of eight skeletal muscles of economic importance, comprising six muscles from the upper hindlimb, one from the lumbar and one from the sacral region, from five eastern grey kangaroos (Macropus giganteus) were determined. Differential staining of myosin heavy chains allowed myofibres to be classified as Types 1 (slow oxidative), 2A (fast oxidative-glycolytic) and 2X/2B (fast glycolytic), as well as the intermediate or transitional Types 2C (Type 1Type 2A intermediate) and 2AX/B (Type 2AType 2X/2B intermediate). The m. psoas minor had a higher area comprising Type 1 myofibres (41.4%) relative to total myofibre area than did any of the other muscles studied (each < 5%). This was due to the m. psoas minor having a higher percentage (31.9%) and larger average cross-sectional area (CSA; 4211 m2) of Type 1 myofibres. Type 2X/2B myofibres comprised over 70% of the relative area in the mm. semimembranosus, semitendinosus and gluteus medius, compared with 34.2% in the m. psoas minor, with the other muscles intermediate. The proportion of Type 2A myofibres ranged from 19.1% (m. gluteus medius) to 34.6% (m. caudal dorsolateral sacrocaudalis) of the relative myofibre area. The m. caudal dorsolateral sacrocaudalis had the largest average myofibre CSA and the m. adductor the smallest (5539 and 2455 ÎŒm2, respectively). Among the intermediate myofibre types, Type 2AX/B myofibres were more prevalent (range 4.3%13.0% of myofibres) than Type 2C myofibres (≀ 0.5%). Overall, the correlations between carcass weight and the percentage and relative areas of myofibres were positive for Type 2A and negative for Type 2X/2B myofibres. The results provide a detailed characterisation of myofibres in kangaroo skeletal muscles of economic importance. Furthermore, they enhance our understanding of factors influencing kangaroo muscle structure and post-mortem metabolism and provide potential indicators of eating quality of kangaroo meat

    Village-based Forage Seed Enterprises: A Sustainable Intervention for Rural Development in the Mixed Farming Systems of Pakistan

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    This paper describes the on-farm profitability and sustainability implications of smallholder dairy farmers in Pakistan from an innovative informal strategy of developing village-based forage seed enterprises (VBFSEs) for berseem clover (Trifolium alexandrinum). The evaluation of agricultural innovations and their impact on whole farm profitability is often very difficult to relate to economic parameters. The agricultural interventions implemented in this study resulted in enhanced crop yields, but the farmers involved did not consider these gains fulfilled their economic rationale. The impact of growing improved varieties of berseem clover using research based technology and developing VBFSEs was validated through on-farm participatory research in the districts of Kasur and Okara, Punjab, Pakistan. The intervention was evaluated on the basis of net income and benefit:cost ratio to the farmers on their investment. The statistical analysis indicated that average net incomes of 512,340 Rs/ha (5,240 US$/ha) was achievable through establishing VBFSE for berseem clover when grown for both green fodder and seed production. The maximum green forage (50.58 t/ha) and seed yields (946 kg/ha) of berseem clover were produced by using improved seed and contemporary agronomic practices compared to 31.76 t/ha and 192 kg/ha, respectively with traditional methods of growing berseem clover. The average net income generated through berseem VBFSEs is eight times greater than for wheat (34,022 Rs/ha), six times more than for oats (45,541), five times more than for canola (56,083), four times more than for conventional berseem clover (67,723), and two times more than the net income from a potato crop (142,737) growing in the region. Thus berseem clover VBFSEs are more profitable than any other cash crop grown in the area, having a benefit to cost ratio of 5.32:1. They are therefore an economically viable agricultural option for smallholder farmers

    Eastern grey kangaroo (Macropus giganteus) myofibres. 1. A simplified classification method using two commercially available antibodies

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    Skeletal muscles from eastern grey kangaroos (Macropus giganteus) were assessed for myofibre contractile and metabolic characteristics using immunocytochemical and histological staining of serial sections. Myofibre classification using monoclonal antibodies that typically bind to mammalian slow (clone WB-MHC), fast (clone MY-32) and Types 1, 2X and 2B (clone S5 8H2) myosin heavy chains was validated using acid- and alkali-preincubated myofibrillar ATPase, NADH and -glycerophosphate dehydrogenase stains. Myofibres were classified as Type 1 (slow oxidative), Type 2A (fast oxidative-glycolytic), Type 2X/2B (fast glycolytic) or intermediate or transitional myofibre Types 2C (Type 1Type 2A intermediate) and 2AX/B (Type 2AType 2X/2B intermediate). The Type 2 (fast) antibody (clone MY-32) used in the present study did not bind to a subset of fast myofibres in any of the eight kangaroo muscles investigated. These myofibres were identified as Type 2A using clone S5 8H2 and on the basis of the histochemical staining profile. Hence, a simplified immunostaining system using only clones WB-MHC (anti-Type 1) and MY-32 (anti-Type 2X/2B) allowed five myofibre types to be identified based on the staining pattern and intensity of staining for the two antibodies. It is concluded that the myofibres of muscles from kangaroos can be quickly classified into five types using two commercially available antibodies. This method is directly applicable for routine investigations into the myofibre properties of commercially important muscles from the kangaroo musculature and, when combined with enzymatic assays for oxidative and glycolytic activity, will allow for a better understanding of factors influencing the quality of meat from kangaroos
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