Livestock mobility in sub-Saharan Africa: A critical review

Abstract Livestock mobility is a complex concept holding many different meanings for observers of pastoralism. The movement of African pastoralists with their livestock has historically been seen by outsiders as working against both environmental and development goals. Recently, there has been an em...

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Published in:Pastoralism
Main Authors: Matthew D. Turner, Eva Schlecht
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-08-01
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13570-019-0150-z
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author Matthew D. Turner
Eva Schlecht
author_facet Matthew D. Turner
Eva Schlecht
author_sort Matthew D. Turner
collection DOAJ
container_title Pastoralism
description Abstract Livestock mobility is a complex concept holding many different meanings for observers of pastoralism. The movement of African pastoralists with their livestock has historically been seen by outsiders as working against both environmental and development goals. Recently, there has been an embrace of the logics of livestock mobility while uncertainties persist of what it means and how it could be measured. In this void, various unexamined associations circulate tying livestock mobility to features of pastoral cultures, ecologies, and institutions. We review the empirical literature that has sought to measure and document livestock mobility, comparing two parameters of its components: grazing and travel mobility. We find strong similarities of daily grazing movements of herds around base locations (camps, villages, water points) but wide variation in the seasonal travel movement between base locations. This variation reflects the fact that mobility is not a cultural norm but responds to the nutrition needs of livestock. The magnitude of travel mobility parameters is the highest for those transhumance systems moving along latitudinal and elevation gradients, thus moving across variation that is more predictable than is commonly presumed in the pastoral literature. The implications of the observed spatialities of livestock mobility for pastoral institutions are discussed.
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spelling doaj-art-e0038668d60642ef8266d7cd789e48672025-08-19T23:17:31ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Pastoralism2041-71362019-08-019111510.1186/s13570-019-0150-zLivestock mobility in sub-Saharan Africa: A critical reviewMatthew D. Turner0Eva Schlecht1Department of Geography, University of Wisconsin-MadisonAnimal Husbandry in the Tropics and Subtropics, University of Kassel and Georg-August-Universität GöttingenAbstract Livestock mobility is a complex concept holding many different meanings for observers of pastoralism. The movement of African pastoralists with their livestock has historically been seen by outsiders as working against both environmental and development goals. Recently, there has been an embrace of the logics of livestock mobility while uncertainties persist of what it means and how it could be measured. In this void, various unexamined associations circulate tying livestock mobility to features of pastoral cultures, ecologies, and institutions. We review the empirical literature that has sought to measure and document livestock mobility, comparing two parameters of its components: grazing and travel mobility. We find strong similarities of daily grazing movements of herds around base locations (camps, villages, water points) but wide variation in the seasonal travel movement between base locations. This variation reflects the fact that mobility is not a cultural norm but responds to the nutrition needs of livestock. The magnitude of travel mobility parameters is the highest for those transhumance systems moving along latitudinal and elevation gradients, thus moving across variation that is more predictable than is commonly presumed in the pastoral literature. The implications of the observed spatialities of livestock mobility for pastoral institutions are discussed.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13570-019-0150-zPastoralismHerdingTranshumanceGrazingLivestock nutritionNon-equilibrium ecology
spellingShingle Matthew D. Turner
Eva Schlecht
Livestock mobility in sub-Saharan Africa: A critical review
Pastoralism
Herding
Transhumance
Grazing
Livestock nutrition
Non-equilibrium ecology
title Livestock mobility in sub-Saharan Africa: A critical review
title_full Livestock mobility in sub-Saharan Africa: A critical review
title_fullStr Livestock mobility in sub-Saharan Africa: A critical review
title_full_unstemmed Livestock mobility in sub-Saharan Africa: A critical review
title_short Livestock mobility in sub-Saharan Africa: A critical review
title_sort livestock mobility in sub saharan africa a critical review
topic Pastoralism
Herding
Transhumance
Grazing
Livestock nutrition
Non-equilibrium ecology
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13570-019-0150-z
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