Cattle numbers, biomass, productivity and land degradation in the commercial farming sector of Namibia, 1915‐95
- 1 November 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Development Southern Africa
- Vol. 15 (4) , 555-572
- https://doi.org/10.1080/03768359808440031
Abstract
As part of a natural resource accounting project undertaken in Namibia, livestock accounts have been drawn up and are being used to analyse the relationship between numbers of livestock, rainfall, land degradation, and economic and policy variables. Part of the analysis concerns an investigation into trends in cattle numbers, changes in cattle biomass and the productivity of livestock in commercial areas. Cattle numbers increased from 1914 until 1960, then declined steadily to half that number. This decline was at least partly due to deliberate actions by farmers to improve herd productivity and production efficiency. Although beef production did not decline over this period, productivity is still lower than potential industry standards. Range degradation (bush encroachment) may have contributed to this curtailment. This investigation has implications for an understanding of long‐term carrying capacity, land degradation and rangeland management, and for agricultural development policies in Namibia and similar regions in southern Africa.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Historical changes in stocking rates of domestic livestock as a measure of semi-arid and arid rangeland degradation in the Cape Province, South AfricaJournal of Arid Environments, 1994
- Empirical information on beef production in regions of Namibia as an aid to restructuring the livestock farming industry along equitable linesDevelopment Southern Africa, 1992
- SUPPLY OF LIVE CATTLE AND OF BEEF IN NAMIBIAAgrekon, 1990
- Veldtoestand en neiging in Kalahari‐duineveld onder ‘n ekstensiewe veeboerderystelselJournal of the Grassland Society of Southern Africa, 1987
- Conservative stocking or maximum profit: A grazing management dilemma?Journal of the Grassland Society of Southern Africa, 1984