Abstract

A questionnaire of 15 questions was completed by four categories of respondents with the aim of establishing the experience and opinions of these groups on the constraints including animal health problems for communal, small-scale sheep and goat farming in the Eastern Cape province of South Africa. The questionnaires were completed independently and categories were representative of the areas investigated. Analysis of responses was done by means, ranges, votes and clusters of responses. Comparisons between the responses of the four categories were made to identify similarities or contrasts. The results revealed that of non-veterinary concerns, stock theft was the major problem for these farms. Nutrition was a further major constraint. A third area of significant concern was the provision or availability of facilities like fences, water troughs, dips and sheds. Lack of marketing and business skills were also seen as important deficiencies to be rectified so as to promote profitable farming. Of the most important veterinary problems identified, the provision, availability, cost and care of drugs and vaccines were seen as major stumbling blocks to effective disease control, as well as lack of access to veterinary services. The most important diseases that constrain small-ruminant livestock farming in the farming systems investigated were sheep scab and other ectoparasites, heart water, enterotoxaemia, internal parasites and bluetongue. A lack of knowledge in key areas of small-stock farming was revealed and should be rectified by an effective training and support programme to improve the contribution of small-ruminant farming to livelihoods in these communities.

Highlights

  • A questionnaire survey was undertaken among four interest groups as part of a project to improve livelihoods and create wealth through smallholder livestock production in the Eastern Cape province of South Africa

  • The opinions and experiences of people actively involved in identifying and dealing with livestock farming health issues have too often been ignored or deprecated as being of little or no value, on the basis that this information is not sourced from scientific experiments or diagnostic tests (Sackett et al 1996)

  • Four important groups involved in farming livestock and in animal health, namely communities of livestock farmers, their livestock production advisors, animal health technicians and veterinarians were identified

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Summary

Introduction

A questionnaire survey was undertaken among four interest groups as part of a project to improve livelihoods and create wealth through smallholder livestock production in the Eastern Cape province of South Africa. Obtaining the experiences and views of interest groups best placed to express valid inputs on livestock health in communal small-scale farming areas helps to identify successes as well as failures and indicates where more concerted action is required to rectify deficiencies (Bembridge & Tapson 1993). The objective of this survey of experience and opinion was to provide information http://www.jsava.co.za. To help provincial authorities to prioritise actions and supply the maximum benefit to target communities

Materials and methods
Participants
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Part I: Overall viewpoints
Part II: Animal Disease General
Part III: Sheep and goat health
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