Fulani cattle productivity and management in the Kachia Grazing Reserve, Nigeria
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University of Ghana
Abstract
Kachia Grazing Reserve (KGR) in northern Nigeria was home to some 10,000 Fulani pastoralists and their 40,000
cattle in June 2011. This study examines productivity and management of cattle belonging to livestock keepers
within the reserve before and after a mass immigration event when 3,000 refugees moved into the reserve with
their cattle to escape inter-community violence during May 2011. Data, on livestock management strategies
(transhumance) and production parameters (herd size, composition, fertility, dynamics), were collected in March,
June and October 2011.
Cattle productivity in KGR is geared to supporting Fulani households while maintaining herd wealth. High offtake
of young animals, especially the selling of heifers, was an unusual finding and may indicate that KGR pastoralists
have been restricting their herd size voluntarily as well as limiting milk production to household requirements.
This is probably due to the absence of a commercial milk market and a higher reliance on the sale of young stock
to meet cash needs.
Despite the widespread perception that grazing reserves are promoting sedentarisation of Fulani pastoralists and
curbing transhumance, the inhabitants of the KGR were observed to practise wide-ranging transhumance both
during wet and dry seasons driven by the limited availability of grazing. Some households selected a sub-sample
of animals for transhumance rather than sending their whole herd, and some maintained cattle on alternative
land-holdings outside the reserve. KGR households described modifying their usual transhumance practices in
response to the mass immigration event and insecurity.
Nevertheless, the herd demography results from this study are broadly similar to data obtained from other studies
over the past 40 years, indicating that productivity and management practices have remained relatively unchanged.
Keywords: Fulani, Cattle, Pastoralist, Productivity, Transhumance, Conflict, Nigeria, Grazing reserve