Policy or poverty trap? Attitude of goat farmers towards the conservation rule on goat rearing in Bhutan

Abstract The study objectives were to gather feedback and opinions of goat farmers on the Forest and Nature Conservation Rule on goat rearing in Bhutan and identify field constraints arising from the conservation rule. Focus group and individual farmer survey methods were employed, and a semi-struct...

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Main Authors: Kesang Wangchuk, Mindu ᅟ, Thukten ᅟ, Sonam Wangchuk
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2016-11-01
Series:Pastoralism
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13570-016-0066-9
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spelling doaj-3f7acff004c543f893051b12828e7eba2020-11-24T21:59:47ZengSpringerOpenPastoralism2041-71362016-11-01611810.1186/s13570-016-0066-9Policy or poverty trap? Attitude of goat farmers towards the conservation rule on goat rearing in BhutanKesang Wangchuk0Mindu ᅟ1Thukten ᅟ2Sonam Wangchuk3Research and Extension Division, Department of Livestock, Ministry of Agriculture and ForestsNational Highland Research and Development Centre, Department of Livestock, Ministry of Agriculture and ForestsDistrict Livestock Office, Department of Livestock, Ministry of Agriculture and ForestsNational Highland Research and Development Centre, Department of Livestock, Ministry of Agriculture and ForestsAbstract The study objectives were to gather feedback and opinions of goat farmers on the Forest and Nature Conservation Rule on goat rearing in Bhutan and identify field constraints arising from the conservation rule. Focus group and individual farmer survey methods were employed, and a semi-structured questionnaire was used to interview 180 goat farmers of six districts. All respondents were aware of the conservation rule. Majority of respondents knew goats as a threat to forest and crops. The vast majority of respondents felt that the conservation rule is not relevant in modern times, and all respondents felt the need to revise the rule. The main problem faced by farmers was difficulty in maintaining their goat numbers to four. The other problems faced were frequent conflicts with Forest personnel and restricted opportunities to earn more income. While the expected changes in the conservation rule included provisions to allow a farmer to rear more number of goats under stall-fed conditions, the additional rule suggested by farmers was allowing goats to browse freely in the forest. Majority of farmers reared goats under stall-fed conditions. The most common practice of managing goat populations was selling goats to fellow farmers. Despite the constraints, a majority of farmers expressed their willingness to continue goat rearing in the future, mainly to generate more income. The study findings suggest revision of the rule on goat rearing, with strong consideration of the needs of the modern farming system and growing economic demands. In revising the rule, the study recommends balanced representation from stakeholders and technical experts from both forest and livestock disciplines.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13570-016-0066-9Conservation rulesForestGoatsIncome generationPolicyStall-feeding
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kesang Wangchuk
Mindu ᅟ
Thukten ᅟ
Sonam Wangchuk
spellingShingle Kesang Wangchuk
Mindu ᅟ
Thukten ᅟ
Sonam Wangchuk
Policy or poverty trap? Attitude of goat farmers towards the conservation rule on goat rearing in Bhutan
Pastoralism
Conservation rules
Forest
Goats
Income generation
Policy
Stall-feeding
author_facet Kesang Wangchuk
Mindu ᅟ
Thukten ᅟ
Sonam Wangchuk
author_sort Kesang Wangchuk
title Policy or poverty trap? Attitude of goat farmers towards the conservation rule on goat rearing in Bhutan
title_short Policy or poverty trap? Attitude of goat farmers towards the conservation rule on goat rearing in Bhutan
title_full Policy or poverty trap? Attitude of goat farmers towards the conservation rule on goat rearing in Bhutan
title_fullStr Policy or poverty trap? Attitude of goat farmers towards the conservation rule on goat rearing in Bhutan
title_full_unstemmed Policy or poverty trap? Attitude of goat farmers towards the conservation rule on goat rearing in Bhutan
title_sort policy or poverty trap? attitude of goat farmers towards the conservation rule on goat rearing in bhutan
publisher SpringerOpen
series Pastoralism
issn 2041-7136
publishDate 2016-11-01
description Abstract The study objectives were to gather feedback and opinions of goat farmers on the Forest and Nature Conservation Rule on goat rearing in Bhutan and identify field constraints arising from the conservation rule. Focus group and individual farmer survey methods were employed, and a semi-structured questionnaire was used to interview 180 goat farmers of six districts. All respondents were aware of the conservation rule. Majority of respondents knew goats as a threat to forest and crops. The vast majority of respondents felt that the conservation rule is not relevant in modern times, and all respondents felt the need to revise the rule. The main problem faced by farmers was difficulty in maintaining their goat numbers to four. The other problems faced were frequent conflicts with Forest personnel and restricted opportunities to earn more income. While the expected changes in the conservation rule included provisions to allow a farmer to rear more number of goats under stall-fed conditions, the additional rule suggested by farmers was allowing goats to browse freely in the forest. Majority of farmers reared goats under stall-fed conditions. The most common practice of managing goat populations was selling goats to fellow farmers. Despite the constraints, a majority of farmers expressed their willingness to continue goat rearing in the future, mainly to generate more income. The study findings suggest revision of the rule on goat rearing, with strong consideration of the needs of the modern farming system and growing economic demands. In revising the rule, the study recommends balanced representation from stakeholders and technical experts from both forest and livestock disciplines.
topic Conservation rules
Forest
Goats
Income generation
Policy
Stall-feeding
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13570-016-0066-9
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AT thuktenᅟ policyorpovertytrapattitudeofgoatfarmerstowardstheconservationruleongoatrearinginbhutan
AT sonamwangchuk policyorpovertytrapattitudeofgoatfarmerstowardstheconservationruleongoatrearinginbhutan
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