Fodder – animal
feed – is any agricultural foodstuff mostly used to feed domesticated livestock
– such as cattle, goats, sheep, chickens and pigs.
Under
the integrated crop-small ruminant production system in West Africa, Ghana’s Crops
Research Institute (CRI) of the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research
(CSIR) is researching into the production, storage and marketability of fodder.
This
is in line with the goal to increase agricultural productivity for poverty
reduction and enhanced food security.
According
to Animal Scientist on the project, Dr. Christopher Antwi, the new technology would
enable farmers access quality feed for livestock production.
“The
farmers do complain about the bulkiness of the fodder coming from the farm to
the homestead, so we try to develop this technology which will reduce the cost
of transportation,” he said.
Dr.
Antwi says the technology is simple and cost-effective, involving a rectangular
box – 75cm x 50cm – stuffed with fodder materials, compressed and tired with a
rope to reduce the bulkiness.
“In
the dry season, we don’t have enough fodder for feeding, so these would be back-up
for the farmers to feed; so if other farmers see the bills in colleagues’
homes, they’ll buy to feed their animals,” he stated.
The
project seeks to develop and strengthen the crop –sheep and goats value chain
in the sub-humid tropics of Ghana and Benin and semi-arid regions of Gambia and
Mali.
Agricultural
Economist, Jonas Osei-Adu says there are opportunities in fodder marketing,
especially in the northern parts of Ghana.
“When
you grow cowpea or maize, how do you make use of the leaves to feed your
animals? Economically, it’s going to increase farmers’ income because instead
of buying special feed for your animals, you’re going to get feed at very cheap
price and sometimes you don’t have to buy because you’ll get them direct from
your farm to feed your animals,” he noted.
Some
Ghanaian farmers are recording 50-200 percent increase in crop yield under the
innovative project that integrates crop and small ruminants for sustainable
production.
Story
by Kofi Adu Domfeh
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