Abstract:
T he Government o f Ethiopia is trying to increase the export o f ruminant livestock and meat
that can contribute to market-led economic growth and poverty reduction in the country. One
o f the main constraints hampering this effort is the supply of cattle, sheep and goats which
can meet export quality requirements.
• Poor nutrition and feed shortages are root causes for the poor performance of the
livestock sector in Ethiopia. Most livestock destined for export or slaughter are
produced in the pastoral areas from rain fed pastures and are slaughtered with little or
no access to better quality feeds required to increase weight, improve condition and
dressing percentage and reduce age at slaughter.
• Poor nutrition results in slow growth rate in growing animals and low production and
reproduction performance. Poorly fed animals take too long to reach optimum
slaughter weight and the meat produced by such animals may not satisfy the desired
quality attributes (such as tenderness) to fulfill the demand o f the consumers. When
the quality of the fodder is low, animals are not able to eat what is required to put on
weight. Because of the slow growth rate, the animals become old before they reach
the desired live weight for sale. Hence the quality o f the beef becomes far from
satisfactory. Feed utilization is very inefficient as most o f the feed (about 85%) is
used for body maintenance. In such a system there appears to be a tremendous
potential for improvement.
• There is a significant potential for feeding livestock from occasional surplus grains
and agro-industrial by-products such as oilseed cakes, milling by-products, molasses
and horticultural crop wastes. These potential feeds, their nutritive values and
seasonal availability are not well documented. Thus this study was commissioned by
the Ethiopia SPS-LMM Program with the objectives o f assessing the types,
availability and nutritive value (protein, energy and micronutrients contents),
alternative uses and prices of available feed resources, the location and seasonal
availability o f the feeds and possibilities of enhancing forage supply and availability.
The study was carried out as a pilot study during 2006 and 2007 in parts o f Oromia and
Southern Nations, Nationalities and Peoples (SNNP) Regional States within a radius of about
200 km from Hawassa town. Five woredas (districts) were selected for the study from each
region. These include Hawassa, Shebedino, Badawacho, Damot Gale and Soddo Zuria from
SNNPR and Adami-Tullu Jiddo Kombolcha, Arsi-Negele, Lume, Kofale and Shashemene
woredas from Oromia. The selection of the Wored? was based on their proximity, relative
activity in animal fattening, feed production and marketing and hence the selected Woredas
may not be representative of each region. Data/information on types, quantity, seasonal
availability, price, uses and quality of different feed resources was collected, processed and
analyzed. Moreover, relevant published and unpublished documents were reviewed. The
nutritive values of the different feed resources were described based on analytical results
published in various journals and workshop proceedings as well as on SSA Feeds (a webbased
software and database that provides information on the nutritive value of a large
number of livestock feeds from sub-Saharan Africa). See http://www.vslp.org/ssafeed/ A number of feed resources (roughages and concentrates) that can be used in feedlots
and/or small scale fattening operations have been identified in the different areas that have
been assessed.
fhe predominant roughage sources are natural pastures, crop residues and aftermath
grazing. Because o f expansion o f cultivation and shrinkage of traditional grazing areas,
crop residues are assuming greater importance as sources o f roughage feeds than natural
pastures in most places.
• However, alternative uses o f crop residues are competing with their feed use. For
example, tef straw is an important source roughage feed in feedlot operations. On
the other hand, there is a competing demand for use o f this resource for house
construction (for reinforcement o f mud for plastering o f walls during house
construction).
• In the enset and root crops growing areas of the south, by-products such as enset
and banana leaves, sweet potato vines, cassava and sugar cane tops make substantial
contribution to the livestock feed supply.
• State Farms and Seed Multiplication Farms o f the Ethiopian Seed Enterprise also
make a modest contribution to the livestock feed supply in their respective
vicinities. The primary feed resources obtained from these enterprises are crop
residues, stubble grazing and some damaged grains.
• In maize and sorghum growing areas substantial feed resources are produced in the
form o f thinning, leaf stripping, topping and stover. In State Farms and Seed
Multiplication Farms producing open pollinated varieties o f maize, the male lines
are removed after fertilization and sold to livestock producers either as green maize
stover (after removing the cobs) or as whole maize forage (without removing the
cobs).
• Although a large number o f cultivated forage and pasture crops have been
introduced to the study areas, the adoption and actual use o f the forages has been
very much limited. Some o f the most commonly grown forage crops include Napier
grass, Rhodes grass, oats, vetch, Green leaf and Silver leaf Desmodium, lablab,
fodder beet, radish, pigeon pea, Sesbania and Leucaena.
• Fodder conservation as hay or silage, when the forage is available in relatively large
quantity for use during periods o f feed shortage, is not a common practice in most
o f the areas.
The supply and use of agro-industrial by-products (oilseed cakes, milling by-products and
molasses) is limited to urban and peri-urban livestock producers. Although there are a large
number of flour mills and oil processing plants in most o f the study areas, the actual
production and supply o f milling by-products and oilseed cakes is very much limited. All
the factories are operating below their capacity due to
o shortage and high price of raw materials (wheat and oilseeds)
o lack o f sufficient demand for the main product (wheat flour) in the case of
flour mills
o inability to compete with cheaply imported oil from abroad
• Some o f the oil seeds such as sesame, noug and linseed have a high demand on the
export market, contributing to shortage o f domestic supply to oil processing plants.