Files
Abstract
Africa is home to diverse and genetically unique
ruminant livestock and wildlife species. The continent,
however, faces huge food security
challenges, partly due to low productivity of the
livestock. As a centre of cattle domestication,
Africa hosts genetically unique cattle, being products
of generations of co-evolution with diverse
people, each selecting for different attributes
under different production systems and environments.
Over millennia, this diversity of purpose has led to
rich and unparalleled blends of indigenous and
exotic cattle. Different parasites and pathogens,
whose vigour has been buoyed by variable but
generally favourable tropical conditions, have coevolved
and served as critical drivers, making
African cattle some of the world’s most scientifically
interesting and valuable populations. This
diversity is being lost at an alarmingly rate, and insitu
conservation will not significantly save it.
These cattle can potentially provide adequate
food and income to their keepers. First their
genetic and phenotypic diversity should be understood,
and then carefully tailored to specific
production systems to improve their productivity.
To realistically conserve these cattle, for which no
conservation plans currently exist, available
modern bio- and information technologies are
needed to assemble and analyse complex sets of
information on them. As the climate and pathogens
all change, by smartly conserving (ex-situ)
those at risk the genetic attributes critical for the
world’s future food security challenges would be
saved.
This paper discusses the diversity of the African
cattle and the need for their system-wide characterisation
in order to allow their keepers to cope
with the changing system, and minimise the loss
of these unique genotypes.