Literature DB >> 23552287

Role of self-sufficiency, productivity and diversification on the economic sustainability of farming systems with autochthonous sheep breeds in less favoured areas in Southern Europe.

R Ripoll-Bosch1, M Joy1, A Bernués1.   

Abstract

Traditional mixed livestock cereal- and pasture-based sheep farming systems in Europe are threatened by intensification and specialisation processes. However, the intensification process does not always yield improved economic results or efficiency. This study involved a group of farmers that raised an autochthonous sheep breed (Ojinegra de Teruel) in an unfavourable area of North-East Spain. This study aimed to typify the farms and elucidate the existing links between economic performance and certain sustainability indicators (i.e. productivity, self-sufficiency and diversification). Information was obtained through direct interviews with 30 farms (73% of the farmers belonging to the breeders association). Interviews were conducted in 2009 and involved 32 indicators regarding farm structure, management and economic performance. With a principal component analysis, three factors were obtained explaining 77.9% of the original variance. This factors were named as inputs/self-sufficiency, which included the use of on-farm feeds, the amount of variable costs per ewe and economic performance; productivity, which included lamb productivity and economic autonomy; and productive orientation, which included the degree of specialisation in production. A cluster analysis identified the following four groups of farms: high-input intensive system; low-input self-sufficient system; specialised livestock system; and diversified crops-livestock system. In conclusion, despite the large variability between and within groups, the following factors that explain the economic profitability of farms were identified: (i) high feed self-sufficiency and low variable costs enhance the economic performance (per labour unit) of the farms; (ii) animal productivity reduces subsidy dependence, but does not necessarily imply better economic performance; and (iii) diversity of production enhances farm flexibility, but is not related to economic performance.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23552287     DOI: 10.1017/S1751731113000529

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Animal        ISSN: 1751-7311            Impact factor:   3.240


  3 in total

1.  Meat quality of light lambs is more affected by the dam's feeding system during lactation than by the inclusion of quebracho in the fattening concentrate.

Authors:  S Lobón; M Blanco; A Sanz; G Ripoll; J R Bertolín; M Joy
Journal:  J Anim Sci       Date:  2017-11       Impact factor: 3.159

2.  The economic effects of grazing in small-scale lamb fattening production systems in central México through a scenario analysis.

Authors:  Jesús Armando Salinas-Martínez; Rodolfo Rogelio Posadas-Domínguez; Juan Carlos Ángeles-Hernández; Leydi Diana Morales-Díaz; Samuel Rebollar-Rebollar; Rolando Rojo-Rubio; Carlos Manuel Arriaga-Jordán
Journal:  Trop Anim Health Prod       Date:  2022-07-20       Impact factor: 1.893

3.  Organoleptic and Nutritional Traits of Lambs from Spanish Mediterranean Islands Raised under a Traditional Production System.

Authors:  Rosario Gutiérrez-Peña; Manuel García-Infante; Manuel Delgado-Pertíñez; José Luis Guzmán; Luis Ángel Zarazaga; Susana Simal; Alberto Horcada
Journal:  Foods       Date:  2022-04-30
  3 in total

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