Literature DB >> 26054513

Estimating population and livestock density of mobile pastoralists and sedentary settlements in the south-eastern Lake Chad area.

Vreni Jean-Richard1, Lisa Crump, Abbani Alhadj Abicho, Ali Abba Abakar, Abdraman Mahamat, Mahamat Bechir, Sandra Eckert, Matthias Engesser, Esther Schelling, Jakob Zinsstag.   

Abstract

Mobile pastoralists provide major contributions to the gross domestic product in Chad, but little information is available regarding their demography. The Lake Chad area population is increasing, resulting in competition for scarce land and water resources. For the first time, the density of people and animals from mobile and sedentary populations was assessed using randomly defined sampling areas. Four sampling rounds were conducted over two years in the same areas to show population density dynamics. We identified 42 villages of sedentary communities in the sampling zones; 11 (in 2010) and 16 (in 2011) mobile pastoralist camps at the beginning of the dry season and 34 (in 2011) and 30 (in 2012) camps at the end of the dry season. A mean of 64.0 people per km2 (95% confidence interval, 20.3-107.8) were estimated to live in sedentary villages. In the mobile communities, we found 5.9 people per km2 at the beginning and 17.5 people per km2 at the end of the dry season. We recorded per km2 on average 21.0 cattle and 31.6 small ruminants in the sedentary villages and 66.1 cattle and 102.5 small ruminants in the mobile communities, which amounts to a mean of 86.6 tropical livestock units during the dry season. These numbers exceed, by up to five times, the published carrying capacities for similar Sahelian zones. Our results underline the need for a new institutional framework. Improved land use management must equally consider the needs of mobile communities and sedentary populations.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26054513     DOI: 10.4081/gh.2015.307

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Geospat Health        ISSN: 1827-1987            Impact factor:   1.212


  2 in total

1.  Nutritional status and intestinal parasites among young children from pastoralist communities of the Ethiopian Somali region.

Authors:  Kadra A Osman; Jakob Zinsstag; Rea Tschopp; Esther Schelling; Jan Hattendorf; Abdurezak Umer; Seid Ali; Colin I Cercamondi
Journal:  Matern Child Nutr       Date:  2020-02-05       Impact factor: 3.092

2.  Africa's Nomadic Pastoralists and Their Animals Are an Invisible Frontier in Pandemic Surveillance.

Authors:  James M Hassell; Dawn Zimmerman; Eric M Fèvre; Jakob Zinsstag; Salome Bukachi; Michele Barry; Mathew Muturi; Bernard Bett; Nathaniel Jensen; Seid Ali; Stace Maples; Jonathan Rushton; Rea Tschopp; Yahya O Madaine; Rahma A Abtidon; Hannah Wild
Journal:  Am J Trop Med Hyg       Date:  2020-11       Impact factor: 2.345

  2 in total

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