Skip to main content

page search

Displaying 1501 - 1512 of 4607

Soil restoration after seven years of exclosure management in northwestern Ethiopia

LandLibrary Resource
Journal Articles & Books
December, 2016

Ecological restoration through exclosure establishment has become an increasingly important approach to reversing degraded ecosystems in rangelands worldwide. The present study was conducted in northwestern Ethiopia where policy programs are aiming to restore degraded lands. Changes in soil properties following establishing exclosures on communal grazing lands were investigated.

GUIDELINES FOR APPLYING AND STRENGTHENING THE USE OF CRITERIA AND INDICATORS FOR SUSTAINABLE FOREST AND RANGELANDS MANAGEMENT IN THE NEAR EAST AND NORTH AFRICA REGION

LandLibrary Resource
Journal Articles & Books
December, 2016
Algeria
Egypt
Morocco
South Africa
Canada
Tunisia
Sudan

The aim of the practical guidelines presented in this document is to support the adoption and usability of the criteria and indicators (C&I) for Sustainable Management of Forests and Rangelands (SFRM) adopted by the 22nd Session of the Near East Forestry and Range Commission (NEFRC).

Somalia 2017

LandLibrary Resource
Institutional & promotional materials
December, 2016
Somalia

Three years of drought have taken a heavy toll on the rangelands and water supplies that Somalia’s 7+ million pastoralists rely on to keep their animals alive and healthy. Livestock are their most important possessions – trade items bartered for food and other essentials; high-value assets used as collateral; the source of daily dairy protein.

GPS based tools for extensively reared cattle: relationship between temperature and animal activity

LandLibrary Resource
Journal Articles & Books
December, 2016

A study was conducted to track a group of grazing cows by GPS-GPRS technology. GPS devices were placed in the neck of 3 non-gestating and non-lactating Morucha cows (averaged 8 years old). The GPS units emitted data regarding animal position every 10 minutes for a period of 28 days in which the animals could range freely in the experimental farm.