Abstract

Low-input pastoral production systems provide up to 90 % of livestock and livestock products consumed in Uganda. However, pastoral communities are increasingly faced with the challenge of meeting their livestock needs in terms of forage, a situation exacerbated by climatic variability. The study identified the patterns of forage availability and quality, compared perceived patterns of forage availability with normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) and determined drivers of forage availability in Karamoja sub-region. Over a 12-month period, 75.3 % of the respondents perceived forage to be sufficiently available with differentiated availability in the livelihood zones and between livestock species (goats, sheep, cattle, donkeys and camels). A similar pattern was observed with regard to perceived forage quality. A significant relationship between perceived forage availability and long-term mean monthly NDVI dynamics was observed. A lag time of 2.9 months existed between rainfall and vegetation response peak periods. Mean monthly rainfall pattern was found to be correlated with perceived forage availability. The length of residence by a livestock keeper, frequency of grazing, number of kraals, presence of governing rules, and presence of conflicts and knowledge of pasture locations, restricted movement and ease of access to grazing areas significantly (P ≤ 0.05) were the major perceived drivers of forage availability. Therefore, we find that pastoral communities in Karamoja have detailed traditional ecological knowledge of forage status and their perceived determinants. There is a need to conduct nutritional analysis of key forage species available in the different livelihood zones. Finally, there is a need to constantly monitor socio-political conditions that have potential of creating ‘artificial’ forage shortage in the sub-region.

Highlights

  • Low-input livestock production systems strongly depend on natural grazing pastures (Hesse and Cotula 2006; Kerven and Behnke 2011)

  • Our study recording of significant increase in forage availability observed by respondents but not readily reflected by the normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) is a testament of a rich knowledge system of pastoral people about vegetation dynamics

  • The availability is differentiated across various locations in the Karamoja livelihood zones, leading to heterogeneity of grazing landscapes

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Summary

Introduction

Low-input livestock production systems strongly depend on natural grazing pastures (Hesse and Cotula 2006; Kerven and Behnke 2011). Changes in policies on pasture use in the Chinese Tibet led to increased fencing of pastures as well as a shift in rangeland management goals (Xu et al 2009). Such actions influence access to pastures and provide insights into availability patterns in the event of constrained access. Government interventions in the trans-Himalayan region of northern India to develop a market-based economy led to

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