African agriculture faces triple threats of climate change, population growth and inequality, necessitating sustainability research in agriculture that comprehensively examines social, economic, environmental, and socio-political trade-offs. To examine sustainable beef production in Botswana, this study used a mixed-method approach to explore Feedlot and Free-range cattle management systems. First, competing but overlapping factors of environmental, economic, and social sustainability in beef production were identified from literature review, and a conceptual framework for sustainability was used to assess the trade-offs inherent in both management systems. Second, abattoir post-mortem examinations were used to compare 25 feedlot cattle and 22 free-range cattle across standard factors including: carcass dress mass (CDM), carcass grade, fat colour, conformation, dentition, carcass and offal postmortem decisions, and reasons for the decisions. Lastly, sustainability trade-offs for feedlot and free-range cattle management were compared through a Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunity, and Threats (SWOT) analysis. Sustainability assessment showed that feedlots rely on imported grains like corn and soybean, increasing producers' uncertainty as an increasingly turbulent world affects grains availability and pricing. Free-range pasture systems, on the other hand, rely on rainfed agriculture (and often communal lands), which are increasingly challenged by the intersections of climate change, overgrazing and issues of land access. Feedlot animals had a significantly higher CDM (p = 0.0001) at 237.56 kg ± 6.98 (Mean ± SEM) compared to 184.50 kg ± 7.44 for Free-range cattle and higher incidences of red offal condemnation rates (lung, liver, and spleen) (p < 0.05) compared to free-range cattle. Free-range cattle had higher green offal condemnation rates specifically large tripe (p = 0.026) compared to feedlot cattle. SWOT analysis confirmed the trade-offs in several factors including carcass weight, feed costs, and climate change impacts. The conceptual framework for sustainability, postmortem findings and SWOT analysis reveal cattle farming challenges and trade-offs that must be made to address disease burdens, animal nutrition, and productivity in Botswana.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11250-025-04355-1 | DOI Listing |
The use of packed cell volume (PCV) to monitor health status of cattle is widely known but this prognostic approach can be complex to interpret due to several factors affecting its values. This research therefore aims to explain variations in PCV values with focus on the biological and environmental fixed determinants that would assist veterinary practitioners and scientists in better understanding of such information, especially in the free-ranging cattle husbandry systems. A total of 921 blood samples covering three cattle genotypes were collected from almost the entire length of The Gambia for PCV analysis by the microhaematocrit technique and then, trypanosomosis diagnosis based on microscopy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTrop Anim Health Prod
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Department of Veterinary Sciences, Content Farm, Botswana University of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Gaborone, Botswana.
African agriculture faces triple threats of climate change, population growth and inequality, necessitating sustainability research in agriculture that comprehensively examines social, economic, environmental, and socio-political trade-offs. To examine sustainable beef production in Botswana, this study used a mixed-method approach to explore Feedlot and Free-range cattle management systems. First, competing but overlapping factors of environmental, economic, and social sustainability in beef production were identified from literature review, and a conceptual framework for sustainability was used to assess the trade-offs inherent in both management systems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chromatogr B Analyt Technol Biomed Life Sci
February 2025
University of Texas at San Antonio, 1 UTSA Circle, Department of Chemistry, San Antonio, Texas 78249, United States.
The integration of free-range beef livestock into the human food chain has been continuously threatened by outbreaks of babesiosis, which is propagated by ticks that vector the protozoans that cause the disease. The protozoans are spread among livestock by certain species of ticks, known collectively as cattle fever ticks (CFT). Although eliminated from the US in the 1940s, CFT continue to infiltrate the US by crossing the US/Mexico border on stray livestock and wildlife, and infest cattle herds.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnimals (Basel)
February 2025
TUM School of Life Sciences, Technical University of Munich, Liesel-Beckmann-Str. 2/II, 85354 Freising-Weihenstephan, Germany.
After milking, dairy cows seek the nearest water trough, but access depends on competitive success. This study descriptively characterized individual drinking behavior after milking in association with physiological traits and competitive success in a herd of 42 lactating Brown Swiss cows held in a free-range barn. Cows were milked and fed twice a day, and the drinking behavior was video recorded after leaving the milking parlor during 22 milkings in July 2022.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
February 2025
College of Veterinary Medicine, Inner Mongolia Agricultural University, Hohhot, China.
Enterocytozoon bieneusi is a zoonotic pathogen, with cattle serving as major reservoirs and important mediums for its transmission. However, data on the prevalence and subtypes of E. bieneusi in cattle from Northern Shanxi and Central Inner Mongolia, China, are limited.
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