Abstract :
Urban livestock husbandry receives growing attention given the increasing urban demand for livestock products. At the same time,
little is known about the resource use efficiency in urban livestock enterprises and eventual negative externalities. In livestock
production, feeds are an important resource whose nutrients are transformed into products (meat and milk) to generate financial
return to the producer. The lack of knowledge on nutrient supply through feed might lead to oversupply with severe environmental
impacts. In Niamey, a typical West African city and capital of the Republic of Niger, urban livestock production is constrained by
feed scarcity, especially during the dry season. Here, the issue of resource use efficiency was studied in 13 representative and
differently managed sheep/goat and cattle enterprises characterized by high and low feed inputs, respectively, during a period of
28 months. Nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P) and potassium (K) inflows into each farm through livestock feeds and outflows through
manure were determined using a semi-structured questionnaire; interviews were accompanied by regular weighing of feed supplied
and dung produced. Live weight gain (LWG) and efficiency of conversion of total feed dry matter offered (kg TDMO/kg LWG) were
computed along with nutrient balances (NBs) per metabolic body mass (kg0.75). NBs (per kg0.75/day) in the high-input (HI) sheep/goat
enterprises were 11762.4 mg N, 1127.2mg P and 11363.5 mg K and were significantly greater (P,0.05) than those in low-input
(LI) units (169.1mg N, 298.3 mg P and 116.5mg K). In HI cattle enterprises, daily balances averaged 1454.1mg N, 140.1mg
P and 1341.8 mg K compared to 134.4mg N, 29.0mg P and 168.3mg K (P.0.05) in LI cattle systems. All systems were
characterized by poor conversion efficiencies of offered feed, which ranged from 13.5 to 46.1 kg TDMO/kg LWG in cattle and from
15.7 to 43.4 kg TDMO/kg LWG in sheep/goats. LWG in HI sheep/goats was 53 g/day in the rainy season, 86 g/day in the hot dry
season and 104 g/day in the cool dry season, while HI cattle lost 79 g/day in the hot dry season and gained 121 g/day and 92 g/day
in the cool dry and rainy seasons, respectively. The data indicate that there is nutrient wasting and scope for improvement of
feeding strategies in Niamey’s livestock enterprises, which might also decrease nutrient losses to the urban environment.
Keywords :
live weight changes , conversion efficiency of offered feed , small ruminants , Urban Agriculture , Zebu cattle