| Literature DB >> 27618998 |
Christian R Vogl1, Brigitte Vogl-Lukasser2, Michael Walkenhorst3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The sustainable management of animal health and welfare is of increasing importance to consumers and a key topic in the organic farming movement. Few systematic studies have been undertaken investigating farmers' local knowledge related to this issue. Ethnoveterinary medicine (EVM) is a discipline focusing on local knowledge and folk methods in veterinary medicine, however most ethnoveterinarian studies primarily address the treatment of animal diseases. Very few studies have explored prophylactic methods.Entities:
Keywords: Animal feed; Animal husbandry; Ethnoveterinary medicine; Local knowledge; Organic farming; Preventive veterinary medicine; Traditional ecological knowledge
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27618998 PMCID: PMC5020533 DOI: 10.1186/s13002-016-0104-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ethnobiol Ethnomed ISSN: 1746-4269 Impact factor: 2.733
Fig. 1Map of Austria (upper right) and map of Eastern Tyrol (lower left). Circles indicate the valleys where the interviews were done (A: Drautal, B: Villgratental, C: Defferegental, D: Virgental, E: Iseltal). Scale: distance Sillian – Lienz approx. 27 km: (Source: basemap.at 2016)
Categories and number of practices mentioned per category in relation to the farmers’ aim of maintaining and improving livestock health and welfare (n = 144; 1,139 practices mentioned)
| Category | Number of practices mentioned | Examples of practices mentioned by informants |
|---|---|---|
| Fodder/feeding | 416 | Kind of fodder, quality of fodder etc. (Table |
| Animal care or management | 338 | Claw trimming, animal cleanliness, exercise during summer on alpine grazing grounds |
| Environmental management | 209 | Ventilation in the stable, cleanliness of troughs, sufficient litter |
| Human-animal relationship | 70 | Taking one’s time, handling with care and love, proper observation of animals |
| Veterinary medicine | 21 | Deworming, sheep dip, testing for Lyme disease, veterinarian medical control |
| Household remedy | 18 | Lubrication with used grease or lard against insects |
| Breeding | 18 | Own breeds, native breeds, Simmental breed vulnerable to claw problems |
| Cultural-religious activities | 13 | Sprinkling with holy water, feeding of sacred Easter horseradish, feeding of sacred salt |
| Other categories | 36 | Organic farming |
Sub-categories from the “feeding/fodder” category (Table 1), categorised and sorted by the authors by coincidences in contents (n = 144; 16 informants with no answer in this category; 1 questionnaire not analysable; 416 practices mentioned in total)
| Sub-Category | Number of practices | Explication | Examples of practices |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kind of fodder/feed | 164 | Composition of fodder and different components of particular fodder, including feeding composition at a particular stage of animal life | “mountain meadow hay”, “wheat bran”, “colostrum” … |
| “14 days before calving, feeding of …” | |||
| Quality of fodder | 125 | Different terms for high quality | “clean”, “healthy”, “good”, “own” |
| Feeding ration | 65 | Amount of feeding ration and appropriate rate of different components of the fodder | “more hay than silage“, “enough of…”, “not too much of …” |
| Method of fodder production | 39 | Methods concerning mainly grassland | “no artificial fertiliser for grassland”, “mowing after sunset”, “mowing when grasses are mature” |
| Other sub-categories | 23 | “naturally feeding”, “organic agriculture” |
Categories and number of plants/generic terms per category in relation to the farmers’ aim of maintaining animal health and welfare in the free lists FL2, FL3 and in interviews on history of fodder and feeding (HI, n = 144, including 5 key informants). Most of the plants and generic terms show various uses and are mentioned in more than one category
| Category | Number of plants mentioned | Number of generic terms mentioned | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| All | FL2 | FL3 | HI | All | FL2 | FL3 | HI | |
| Totala | 87 | 51 | 39 | 69 | 22 | 16 | 7 | 14 |
| Kind of fodder/feeda | 77 | 45 | 38 | 60 | 20 | 15 | 6 | 14 |
| Care of the animalsa | 2 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0/0 | 0 | 0 |
| Environmental managementa | 11 | 10 | 5 | 10 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 3 |
| Human-animal relationshipa | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0/0 | 0 | 1 |
| Veterinary medicinea | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Household remedya (excluding fodder medicine) | 9 | 9 | 8 | 8 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 3 |
| Cultural/religious activitiesa | 17 | 8 | 10 | 17 | 5 | 4 | 1 | 4 |
aMultiple answers occurring between FL 2, FL 3 and HI
Plants and generic terms mentioned as maintaining and improving the health of animals in Eastern Tyrol (n = 144)
| Category | Local name | FL1 + FL2 | FL3 | HI | Fo/Fe | Animal | Application | Other |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Plants | ||||||||
| Abies alba Mill. | Tanne | 1 | 0 | x | a/c/d | var | Ap; Dig; Goo; Is; Per; Rest; | Em |
| Achillea millefolium L. | Schafgarbe | 3 | 12/22 | x | b/c/d | go, var | Ba; Dig; Is; Rep2; Sed; | Ra |
| Alchemilla spp. | Frauenmantel | 1 | 2/4 | x | a/d | var, ca | Dig; Goo; Is; Rep1; | Ra |
| Allium cepa L. | Zwiebel | 0 | 6/20 | x | d | ca, sh | Rep2; | - |
| Allium sativum L. | Knoblauch | 0 | 2/8 | x | c/d | ca | Ap; Rep1; | - |
| Alnus alnobetula (Ehrh.) K.Koch | Lutterstaude | 0 | 0 | x | b | var | Ba; | - |
| Althaea officinalis L. | Eibisch | 0 | 3/5 | x | d | ca, var | Is; Rep2; | Ra |
| Anthriscus sylvestris (L.) Hoffm. | Wiesenkerbel, Rosskümmel | 3 | 0 | - | a/b | ca | Ba; Goo; | - |
| Armoracia rusticana P. Gaertn., B. Mey. & Scherb. | Kren | 1 | 0 | x | - | var | - | Ra |
| Arnica montana L. | Arnika | 2 | 11/58 | x | c/d | var, ca | Is; Rep2; | Hr, Ra |
| Artemisia absinthium L. | Wermut | 0 | 24/39 | x | c/d | ca | Dig; Is; Sed; | Ra |
| Avena sativa L. | Hafer, Hobo | 15 | 6/15 | x | c/d | ca, sh, ho | Goo; Per; Rep1; Rep2; Sed; Sk; | - |
| Beta vulgaris L. | Futterrübe, Runkel | 8 | 0 | x | a | ca, pi | Goo | - |
| Betula spp. | Birke | 0 | 1/2 | x | d | var | Is; | - |
| Brassica oleracea var. capitata L. | Kobis, Weißkraut | 2 | 1/6 | x | a/d | pi, ca | Goo; Is; Rep1; Rep2; | - |
| Brassica rapa var. rapa L. | Rübe, Herbstrübe | 2 | 0/15 | x | a/c/d | ca, pi | Goo; Is; Per; Ur; | - |
| Calendula officinalis L. | Ringelblume, Ringelrose | 0 | 1/30 | x | d | ca, var | Dig; Is | Ra |
| Cannabis sativa L. | Hanf | 0 | 1/1 | x | d | ca | Rep2; | - |
| Carlina acaulis L. | Silberdistel | 0 | 0 | x | a | ca, pi | Goo; | - |
| Carum carvi L. | Kümmel, Kümmelstaude | 0 | 2/6 | x | d | ca | Rep2; | - |
| Cetraria islandica (L.) Ach. | Goasstraube, Isländisch Moos | 22 | 13/44 | x | c/d | ca, sh, ho, pi | Is; Per; Rest; Rep1; Sk; | - |
| Cirsium spinosissimum (L.) Scop. | Einhacken | 1 | 0 | x | c | ca, pi | Per; | - |
| Coriandrum sativum L. | Koriander | 1 | 0 | - | d | ca | Dig; | - |
| Corylus avellana L. | Hasel | 0 | 0 | x | a | var | Goo; | - |
| Cucurbita spp. | Focknkürbis | 0 | 0 | x | a | pi | Goo; | - |
| Elymus repens (L.) Gould | Queckenwurzn | 0 | 0 | x | a | ca, sh | Fs; | - |
| Epilobium spp. | Weidenröschen | 0 | 0 | x | - | var | - | Ra |
| Equisetum arvense L. | Zinnkraut | 1 | 0 | - | a | var | Goo; | - |
| Fagopyrum esculentum Moench | Buchweizen | 0 | 1/1 | - | d | ho | Rep1; | - |
| Foeniculum vulgare Mill. | Fenchel | 1 | 2/6 | x | d | ca | Dig; Rep2; | - |
| Fraxinus excelsior L. | Esche | 2 | 0 | x | a/c | ca, sh | Goo; | Em |
| Geranium spp. | Storchenschnabel | 0 | 4/4 | x | d | ca | Rep1; | - |
| Helianthus annuus L. | Sonnenblume | 0 | 0 | x | c/d | var | Sed; | - |
| Heracleum sphondylium L. | Bärenklau, Bärentatze | 0 | 0 | x | a/b | ca | Ba; Goo; | - |
| Hordeum vulgare L. | Gerste | 16 | 5/16 | x | c/d | ca, sh, ho | Per; Rep1; Rep2; | Hr |
| Hypericum perforatum L. | Johanniskraut | 1 | 2/12 | x | d | var, ca | Is; Rep2; | Hr, Ra |
| Juglans regia L. | Walnuß | 1 | 0/2 | x | - | var | - | Em |
| Juniperus communis L. | Kranewitten, Wacholder | 6 | 5/14 | x | a/c/d | ca | Dig; Goo; Is; Per; Sed; | Em |
| Lamium spp. | Taubnessel | 1 | 0 | - | a | chi | Goo; | - |
| Larix decidua Mill. | Lärche | 1 | 0/40 | x | a | var | Goo; | Em |
| Ligusticum mutellina (L.) Crantz | Madaun, Goblitz, Mutterwurz | 0 | 0 | x | a | var | Goo; | - |
| Linum usitatissimum L. | Leinsamen, Hoorsomen, Linsat | 34 | 22/49 | x | c/d | ca, sh, ho | Dig; Per; Rep2; Sk; Sed; | Hr |
| Malva neglecta Wallr. | Kaspappel | 0 | 0/9 | x | c/d | ca | Dig; | - |
| Matricaria chamomilla L. | Kamille | 1 | 27/100 | x | c/d | var, ca, chi | Is; Rep1; Rep2; Sed; | Hr, Ra |
| Medicago sp. | Luzerne | 1 | 0 | - | a | var | Goo; | - |
| Melissa officinalis L. | Melisse | 1 | 0 | - | - | var | - | Em |
| Mentha spp. | Minze | 2 | 0/1 | x | d | var | Is; Sed; | Em, Ra |
| Papaver somniferum L. | Mohn, Mogn | 0 | 1/4 | x | d | ca | Rest; | - |
| Peucedanum ostruthium (L.) W.D.J. Koch | Meisterwurz | 0 | 3/5 | x | d | var | Is; | Ra |
| Picea abies (L.) H.Karst. | Fichte | 19 | 4/26 | x | a/c/d | ca, sh, go | Ap; Dig; Goo; Is; Per; Rest; | Em |
| Pimpinella anisum L. | Anis | 1 | 1/3 | - | d | ca | Dig; | - |
| Pimpinella saxifraga L. | Bockwurz, Bibernelle | 0 | 0 | x | c | chi | Is; | - |
| Pisum sativum L. | Erbse | 1 | 0 | - | a | ca | Goo; | - |
| Plantago lanceolata L. | Spitzwegerich | 1 | 0 | - | a | var | Goo; | - |
| Prunus avium L. | Kirsche | 0 | 0 | x | a | var | Goo; | - |
| Pteridium aquilinum (L.) Kuhn | Adlerfarn | 0 | 1/1 | x | d | sh | Ap; | Em |
| Quercus spp. | Eiche | 0 | 0 | x | a | var | Goo; | - |
| Ranunculus spp. | Hahnfuß | 1 | 0 | - | b | var | Ba; | - |
| Rhinanthus spp. | Klopf | 1 | 0 | - | b | var | Ba; | - |
| Rhododendron spp. | Almrose | 0 | 0 | x | b | var | Ba; | - |
| Rosa spp. | Rose | 0 | 1/1 | - | d | ca | Rep2; | - |
| Rubus idaeus L. | Himbeere | 0 | 0/1 | x | a | var | Goo; | Ra |
| Rumex spp. | Saupletschn, Focknpletschn, Sauer-Ampfer | 8 | 0/1 | x | a/b/c/d | ca, pi, ho, chi | Ba; Goo; Is; Per; Rep2; | - |
| Salix spp. | Palmbuschn | 2 | 2/2 | x | - | var | - | Hr, Ra |
| Salvia officinalis L. | Salbei | 0 | 0/3 | x | - | var | - | Ra |
| Sambucus nigra L. | Schwarzer Holler | 3 | 2/16 | x | c | ca, pi | Is; | Em, Hr |
| Secale cereale L. | Roggen | 7 | 12/18 | x | b/c/d | ca, pi | Ba; Rep1; Rep2; | - |
| Solanum tuberosum L. | Erdäpfel, Kartoffel | 5 | 0/2 | x | a/d | chi, ca, sh | Fs; Goo; Rep2; | - |
| Stellaria media (L.) Vill. | Hühnerdarm, Hiagepanze | 0 | 0 | x | a | pi, chi | Goo; | - |
| Symphytum officinale L. | Beinwell | 1 | 0/2 | - | a | chi | Goo; | - |
| Thymus spp. | Quendel | 1 | 1/3 | x | c/d | ca, Pi | Ap; Is; Per; | Hr |
| Trifolium spp. | Kleegras | 2 | 0 | - | a | ca | Goo; | - |
| Triticum aestivum L. | Weizen | 14 | 2/8 | x | c/d | ca | Dig; Rep2; Rest; | - |
| Urtica dioica L. | Brennessel | 13 | 1/5 | x | a/c/d | ca, pi, chi | Dig; Goo; Is; Per; Rest; Sk; | - |
| Usnea spp. | Baumbart, Rock | 0 | 0 | x | a | var | Fs; | - |
| Vaccinium myrtillus L. | Schwarzbeere, Heidelbeere | 0 | 0/8 | x | - | var | - | Ra |
| Verbascum spp. | Himmelsbrand | 0 | 0 | x | - | ar | - | Ra |
| Vicia faba L. | Scholleboan, Bühn | 5 | 0 | x | a | var | Fs; | - |
| Vicia sativa L. | Futterwicke | 1 | 0 | - | a | ca | Goo; | - |
| x Triticosecale Wittm. | Triticale | 0 | 1/1 | - | d | sh | Rep1; | - |
| Zea mays ssp. mays L. | Türgn, Mais | 2 | 0/1 | x | a | chi | Goo; | - |
| Processed commercial products | ||||||||
| Camellia sinensis (L.) Kuntze (black tea) | Schwarztee | 0 | 4/41 | x | d | ca | Is; Rest; | - |
| Coffea arabica L. (coffee) | Kaffee | 1 | 17/29 | x | d | ca | Rest; Rep2; | - |
| Echinacea spp. (homöopathic medicine) | Echinacea | 1 | 0 | - | - | ca | - | Hr |
| Malus domestica Borkh. (apple cider vinegar) | Apfelessig | 4 | 5/10 | x | c/d | ca, pi, var | Is; Rep1; | Ca, Em |
| Mentha spp. (peppermint oil) | Minzöl | 1 | 0 | - | - | ca | - | Ca |
| Vitis vinifera L. (red and white wine) | Wein | 1 | 4/6 | x | d | ca, go | Rep1; Rep2; Rest; | - |
| Generic terms | ||||||||
| “Alpine fodder” | Almgras, Almfutter | 7 | 0 | x | a | var | Goo; | - |
| After-grass | Gruimat | 6 | 0 | x | c | var | Rep2; Is; | Ra |
| Ash | Asche | 0 | 1/1 | x | d | pi | Rep1; | - |
| Beer | Bier | 0 | 4/4 | - | d | ca | Rest; Rep2; | - |
| Bread | Brot | 0 | 0 | x | d | ca, var | Rest | Hum, Ra |
| Concentrated feeding stuff | Leck, Kraftfutter | 9 | 0 | x | a/c | var | Goo; | - |
| Grass | Gras | 4 | 1/4 | - | a/c/d | ca, chi | Goo; Rep1; | - |
| Grist | Schrot | 1 | 0 | x | a | ca | Goo; | - |
| Hard liquor | Schnaps | 0 | 39/84 | x | d | ca | Rest; Rep2; Sed; | Hr |
| Hay | Heu | 10 | 0/7 | x | a | var | Dig; Goo; Is | Ra |
| Hay from marshy/mossy meadow | Sauerheu | 3 | 0 | - | a | ho | Goo; | - |
| Hay-blossoms | Bliuma, Mürach | 35 | 3/10 | x | a/c/d | pi, ca, chi, var | Goo; Is; Per; Rest; Rep2 | Em, Hr, Ra |
| Herbs | Kräuter | 14 | 0/1 | x | a | ca, pi, var | Goo; Is; | Ra |
| Marc | Trester | 1 | 0 | - | a | ca | Goo; | - |
| Moss | Moos | 0 | 1/1 | x | - | pi | - | Em |
| Mountain meadow hay | Bergheu, Wiesenheu, Almheu | 27 | 0/6 | x | a/c/d | var | Dig; Goo; | - |
| Roughage | Raufutter | 2 | 0 | - | a | var | Goo; | - |
| Sawdust | Sägemehl | 2 | 0 | - | - | var | - | Em |
| Silage | Gärfutter | 2 | 0 | - | a | var | Goo; | - |
| Straw | Stroh | 9 | 0 | x | a/c | var | Fs; Rep2; | Em, Hr |
| Sugar | Zucker | 0 | 3/6 | x | d | ca | Rep2; | - |
| Thistles | Disteln | 5 | 0 | x | c | ca, pi | Per; | - |
Legend
FL1 and FL2: Plants mentioned in Free List 1 and Free List 2. Figures are frequency of mention
FL3: Plants mentioned in Free List 3. First figure gives frequency of mention for preventive purposes. Second figure gives total frequency of all mentions of this plant being for preventive but also curative use. e.g. 22/49: Linum usitatissimum mentioned 49 times in total, 22 of these mentions were related to preventive use
HI: Plants mentioned in interviews (n = 144, including 5 key informants) on history of fodder and feeding (x = plants mentioned)
Fo/Fe: Plants mentioned in the category fodder/feeding: (a) good fodder; (b) bad fodder; (c) functional fodder; (d) fodder medicine
Animal (mentioned in the category fodder/feeding): chi = chicken; ca = cattle; go = goat; ho = horse; pi = pig; sh = sheep
Application: Lists only applications for preventive use for fodder/feeding, according to the information of the respondents as exemplified in the citations for possible applications below:
(Ap) Antiparasitics: preventive of intestinal parasites
(Ba) Bad quality in a general alimentary way: lowers quality of hay if too much represented in grassland, not to feed to swine to prevent swine erysipelas; weed
(Dig) Digestion: enhances and improves digestion, increases appetite, prevents diarrhoea, prevents disorders in digestion, avoids disorders in digestion by conversion of feeding especially for young stock, healthy digestive tract (especially after deworming) good for digestion while also calming, avoids metabolic disorders during conversion of feeding especially for young stock, stimulates digestion
(Fs) Fodder used in times of scarcity of fodder
(Goo) Good quality in a general alimentary way, variation in diet and eaten with pleasure (when fed fresh), rearing fodder for chicks, good fodder quality (palatable and good nutritive value only if harvested properly), appetising and easily digestible, good fodder quality if fed with caution and not looking too much at performance (negative when used in large quantities), freshly cut grass has good fodder quality if animals are unable to graze on pastures
(Is) Immune system: prevents bovine influenza, improves health and fitness in general, spring therapy for good health and to avoid iron deficiency, prevents swine erysipelas, good for strong immune system, generally blood cleansing, increases the body’s defences, in general tonic, rearing fodder for poultry to prevent diseases
(Per) Performance enhancer: promotes weight gain, growth and development, fattening fodder, increases production of milk, improves milk yield and milk fat, after birth to increase milk production, gives power, nutritious, improves laying performance, gives butter a nice colour
(Rep1) Reproductive 1: avoids milk fever, facilitates delivery, prevents retained placenta, nutritious for pregnant animals (in the final month before delivery), preparation fodder for birth, labour inducer and to induce uterine contractions, refreshment after delivery and to avoid circulatory disorders, helps with quick expulsion of the placenta, expands birth canal, avoids expulsion of uterus
(Rep 2) Reproductive 2: preparation fodder for improved oestrus and avoiding silent oestrus, good for female organs, given before the dams are inseminated (bred) for better acceptance of foetus, stimulates ovulation/oestrus inducer
(Rest) Restorer: restorer after diseases, restorer when animals look ill and have lost weight, restorer for weak animals, restorer after delivery, refreshment for calves after birth
(Sed) Sedative: to avoid irritated animals, to avoid stress after transport or being bought in
(Sk) Skin: improves skin, udder health and hoof quality, improves coat gloss, improves condition of eggshells
(Ur) For better urination
Other categories besides fodder/feeding: (Ca) care of the animals, (Em) environmental management, (Hr) household remedy, external application, in contrast to internal application as fodder medicine, (Hum) Human-animal relationship; (Ra) cultural/religious activities