| Literature DB >> 33829051 |
Walter O Okello1,2, Ewan T MacLeod1, Dennis Muhanguzi1,3, Charles Waiswa1,3,4, Susan C Welburn1,5.
Abstract
Background: The endemic vector-borne diseases transmitted by tsetse and ticks impose heavy burdens on the livestock keepers in Africa. Applying deltamethrin to the belly, legs, and ears of cattle offers a possibility of mitigating these losses at a cost affordable to livestock keepers. Although studies have quantified the impacts of individual diseases on livestock productivity, little is known about the dual economic benefits of controlling both tsetse and ticks, nor about the number of cattle that need to be treated to confer these benefits. Alongside an epidemiological study in south-east Uganda, a farm level assessment was done to investigate the benefits and costs of spraying different proportions of the village cattle population using this restricted application protocol.Entities:
Keywords: Uganda; cost–benefit analysis; gross margin analysis; tick control; trypanosomiasis
Year: 2021 PMID: 33829051 PMCID: PMC8019991 DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2021.616865
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Vet Sci ISSN: 2297-1769
Types of cattle most often treated for ticks and tsetse flies in each household.
| Calf (defined here as young cattle aged 0–2 years) only | 0 | 0.00 |
| Calf and cow (adult female aged 4 years and above) | 17 | 2.83 |
| Calf and heifer (young female aged 2–4 years) | 1 | 0.17 |
| Calf and young male (young male aged 2–4 years) | 0 | 0.00 |
| Calf and non-work oxen | 0 | 0.00 |
| Calf and work oxen | 0 | 0.00 |
| Young male only | 15 | 2.50 |
| Non-work oxen only | 7 | 1.17 |
| Work oxen only | 132 | 22.00 |
| Work oxen and heifer | 30 | 5.00 |
| Work oxen and cow | 51 | 8.50 |
| Heifer only | 80 | 13.33 |
| Heifer and cow | 28 | 4.67 |
| Cow only | 83 | 13.83 |
| Young male and adult male | 11 | 1.83 |
| Young male and heifer | 22 | 3.67 |
| Young male and cow | 15 | 2.50 |
| Young male and calf | 5 | 0.83 |
| None | 103 | 17.17 |
| Total | 600 | 100 |
Draft oxen ownership and work patterns among the RAP households during the intervention.
| 1 | 4.54 | 96.54 | 33.76 (12.34) | 62.87 (7.61) |
| 2 | 59.09 | 87.04 | 25.53 (10.01) | 61.51 (9.04) |
| 3 | 7.27 | 82.47 | 23.94 (9.16) | 58.53 (7.37) |
| 4+ | 29.10 | 86.48 | 24.57 (9.81) | 61.96 (9.23) |
| Average recorded over the 18-month study | 88.13 | 26.95 | 61.21 | |
| Adjusted figure for 12 months | 58.75 | 17.96 | 40.80 | |
Cattle numbers and household gross margin for T1 to T4 during the 18-month period.
| 1. Cattle population (number) | ||||||||
| At start of period | 465 | 456 | 423 | 407 | 481 | 473 | 458 | 451 |
| At end of period | 456 | 440 | 407 | 430 | 473 | 491 | 451 | 485 |
| Average number of cattle during period studied and standard deviation (SD) | 461 (2.99) | 448 (2.89) | 415 (2.84) | 419 (3.04) | 477 (3.07) | 482 (2.93) | 455 (3.12) | 468 (3.12) |
| Average per household (95% Confidence Interval) | 3.87 (3.24–4.37) | 3.66 (3.25–4.14) | 3.52 (2.91–3.96) | 3.58 (3.01–3.93) | 4.00 (3.45–4.56) | 4.09 (3.47–4.51) | 3.81 (3.20–4.31) | 4.04 (3.45–4.34) |
| 2. Gross margin analysis (USD) | ||||||||
| a) Cattle and their produce “out” | ||||||||
| Income from hiring out draft cattle for plowing (SD) | 13,694 (139.78) | 18,048 (195.00) | 15,739 (133.42) | 30,503 (243.76) | 16,882 (134.77) | 33,875 (251.65) | 17,046 (130.59) | 32,797 (255.69) |
| Income from hiring out draft cattle for other work (SD) | 50 (1.65) | 110 (3.03) | 54 (1.82) | 124 (2.74) | 77 (2.01) | 176 (2.99) | 86 (2.72) | 194 (3.71) |
| Value of cattle sold (SD) | 6,290 (124.08) | 9,618 (197.62) | 9,896 (205.11) | 14,130 (219.34) | 6,648 (171.48) | 16,884 (491.95) | 8,016 (181.39) | 15,751 (221.33) |
| Value of cattle given out as loan repayment (SD) | 435 (27. 83) | 551 (29. 62) | 701 (37. 04) | 1,181 (44.24) | 464 (24. 28) | 723 (38. 28) | 604 (33. 21) | 561 (25. 70) |
| Value of cattle slaughtered (SD) | 384 (35. 06) | 518 (33. 33) | 593 (38. 54) | 933 (46. 04) | 389 (26. 12) | 476 (30. 68) | 453 (29. 34) | 679 (35. 63) |
| Value of human labor saved by using draft cattle (only for cases not involving payment) (SD) | 4,797 (47.67) | 5,040 (64.96) | 5,088 (49.21) | 7,386 (72.84) | 6,117 (48.47) | 7,412 (71.31) | 4,749 (44.16) | 6,700 (72.92) |
| Value of milk sold (SD) | 1,313 (28.13) | 1,614 (47.60) | 1,147 (36.98) | 2,647 (71.93) | 1,381 (43.96) | 3,176 (79.19) | 1,381 (49.00) | 2,917 (99.90) |
| Subtotal | 26,963 | 35,499 | 33,218 | 56,904 | 31,958 | 62,722 | 32,335 | 59,599 |
| b) Cattle and produce “in” | ||||||||
| Value of draft cattle bought (SD) | 3,459 (87.35) | 1,176 (51.98) | 4,107 (91.73) | 6,210 (113.54) | 3,927 (83.63) | 9,032 (151.72) | 4,445 (86.54) | 6,980 (116.00) |
| Value of cattle received as gifts or loan repayment (SD) | 1,081 (49.66) | 1,224 (73.95) | 1,710 (59.89) | 1,771 (59.42) | 1,349 (56.34) | 982 (46. 31) | 1,653 (64.47) | 906 (48. 99) |
| Subtotal | 4,540 | 2,400 | 5,817 | 7,981 | 5,276 | 10,014 | 6,098 | 7,886 |
| c) Change in herd value | ||||||||
| Opening valuation (SD) | 111,439 (599.99) | 109,447 (604.79) | 100,610 (600.75) | 97,453 (607.70) | 116,379 (669.93) | 113,120 (656.15) | 104,639 (635.17) | 102,037 (610.92) |
| Closing valuation (SD) | 109,447 (604.79) | 108,479 (607.13) | 97,453 (607.70) | 97,583 (607.94) | 113,120 (656.15) | 113,321 (654.77) | 102,037 (610.92) | 102,285 (610.42) |
| Change in herd value | −1,992 | −968 | −3,157 | 129 | −3,259 | 201 | −2,602 | 248 |
| d) Total livestock output (a–b+c) | 20,431 | 32,131 | 24,244 | 49,052 | 23,423 | 52,909 | 23,635 | 51,961 |
| e) Total variable cost | 3,971 (31.66) | 3,761 (40.08) | 4,947 (35.06) | 2,959 (21.62) | 6,052 (36.53) | 2,004 (19.83) | 6,955 (65.69) | 1,318 (8. 92) |
| f) Total gross margin (d–e) | 16,460 | 28,370 | 19,297 | 46,093 | 17,371 | 50,905 | 16,680 | 50,643 |
| g) Total annual gross margin | 16,460 | 18,914 | 19,297 | 30,729 | 17,371 | 33,936 | 16,680 | 33,762 |
“Before” relates to the 12 months before the intervention began, “after” to the whole of the 18 month intervention period.
The “after” numbers needed to be adjusted from 18- to 12-month estimates.
Annual cattle gross margin and benefit from using RAP compared to control.
| 0% (T1) | 16,460 | 18,914 | 2,454 | 20.45 | 461 (2.99) | 448 (2.89) | 6.51 |
| 25% (T2) | 19,297 | 30,729 | 11,432 | 95.26 | 415 (2.84) | 419 (3.04) | 26.93 |
| 50% (T3) | 17,371 | 33,936 | 16,565 | 138.04 | 477 (3.07) | 482 (2.93) | 33.99 |
| 75% (T4) | 16,680 | 33,762 | 17,082 | 142.35 | 455 (3.12) | 468 (3.12) | 35.44 |
Obtained by first, dividing the gross margins and the cattle population for each treatment, before and after the intervention, and then subtracting these.
Livestock keepers' expenditure on intervention related items over 18 months.
| Value of farmers' time taking cattle for RAP and/or trypanocide treatment | 27 | 121 | 151 | 205 |
| Payment to casual laborers/herdsmen | 3 | 2 | 4 | 5 |
| Cash spent on ropes | 8 | 29 | 50 | 60 |
| Crush repair | 4 | 4 | 5 | 8 |
| Payment to someone help restrain cattle | 0 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
| Payment for water to mix pyrethroids | 0 | 2 | 4 | 5 |
| Total expenditure | 42 | 159 | 216 | 286 |
| Cattle population | 448 | 419 | 482 | 468 |
| Expenditure per bovine per year | 0.06 | 0.25 | 0.30 | 0.41 |
Benefits and costs of different treatments per year per bovine owned.
| 0% (T1) | 6.51 | – | 0 | 2.84 | 0.06 | 2.90 | – | 3.61 | – | 2.24 | 1.55 | – |
| 25% (T2) | 26.93 | 20.42 | 2.02 | 2.06 | 0.25 | 4.33 | 2.21 | 22.6 | 18.99 | 6.22 | 3.85 | 11.38 |
| 50% (T3) | 33.99 | 7.06 | 3.75 | 2.06 | 0.3 | 6.11 | 1.78 | 27.88 | 5.28 | 5.56 | 4.51 | 3.89 |
| 75% (T4) | 35.44 | 1.45 | 5.47 | 2.06 | 0.41 | 7.94 | 1.83 | 27.5 | −0.38 | 4.46 | 4.46 | 0.79 |
Figure 1Average and incremental net benefits for each treatment regime.