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<title>Animal Production</title>
<link>http://ir.haramaya.edu.et//hru/handle/123456789/36</link>
<description/>
<pubDate>Tue, 23 Jun 2026 03:22:32 GMT</pubDate>
<dc:date>2026-06-23T03:22:32Z</dc:date>
<item>
<title>ASSESSMENT OF TRADITIONAL BUTTER PRODUCTION, HANDLING, MARKETING AND ITS PHYSICO-CHEMICAL PROPERTY IN TULLO AND MESELA WOREDAS OF WEST HARARGHE ZONE, OROMIA, ETHIOPIA</title>
<link>http://ir.haramaya.edu.et//hru/handle/123456789/8685</link>
<description>ASSESSMENT OF TRADITIONAL BUTTER PRODUCTION, HANDLING, MARKETING AND ITS PHYSICO-CHEMICAL PROPERTY IN TULLO AND MESELA WOREDAS OF WEST HARARGHE ZONE, OROMIA, ETHIOPIA
Endashaw Gebeyehu Shiferaw; Takele Wolkaro (PhD); Tibebu Manaye (PhD)
Across-sectional survey was employed to assess butter traditional production, handling and&#13;
marketing practices in Tullo and Mesela Woredas of West Hararghe Zone, Oromia,&#13;
Ethiopia. Semi-structured questionnaire and focus group discussion were the methods&#13;
utilized for data collection. The questionnaire were pre-tested and administered to 140&#13;
respondents, with 77 from Tullo and 63 from Mesela Woreda. Additionally, a total of 30&#13;
samples each weighs 50 gm butter from each producer for physicochemical analysis were&#13;
obtained from 30 producers that participating in the survey. The data for physio-chemical&#13;
property analysis was collected from Haramaya University Dairy Technology Laboratory.&#13;
Statistical Package for SPSS was used to analyses the data. Results show that, women and&#13;
daughters were entirely responsible for butter production and handling in the study areas.&#13;
In Mesela Woreda, 47.6% of the respondents were used bottle guard churners and 52.4%&#13;
used plastic churners for butter making. In Tulo Woreda, 49.6% used bottle guard while&#13;
50.4% used plastic churner for butter making. About 60.3% and 64.9% of the respondents&#13;
in Mesela and Tulo Woreda, respectively utilized butter for cosmetics purpose. About 39.7%&#13;
and 45.4% of the respondent in Mesela and Tulo Woredas, respectively used Sheketi&#13;
(traditionally prepared equipment) to handle butter. As the result indicated 100%, female&#13;
has responsibility to sell butter in the study districts. 61.9% and 72.7% in Mesela and Tulo Woreda, respectively, butter buyer conceder freshness as quality factor. In the study districts&#13;
the overall mean value of moisture content of butter was 18.43±0.37 and 18.67±0.53 which&#13;
is higher than the value of standard butter (16%). The fat content of butter collected from&#13;
Mesela and Tulo Woreda were 77.91±0.50 and 78.64±0.50, respectively that indicates lower&#13;
than the value of standard (80%).To concluded that from the results for physicochemical&#13;
property indicates the butter produced in study districts has lower quality. It is&#13;
recommended that efforts should be made to improve awareness among butter producers,&#13;
especially on modern dairy handling and processing practices. This could help improve&#13;
product quality and safety. Regular training on butter production is important to ensure&#13;
butter meets both local and international standards
62p.
</description>
<pubDate>Sun, 01 Sep 2024 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<guid isPermaLink="false">http://ir.haramaya.edu.et//hru/handle/123456789/8685</guid>
<dc:date>2024-09-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
</item>
<item>
<title>EVALUATION OF CHICKEN PRODUCTION PRACTICE, PERFORMANCE AND EGG QUALITY OF BOVANS BROWN AND SASSO CHICKENS IN DOBA DISTRICT, WEST HARARGHE ZONE, ETHIOPIA</title>
<link>http://ir.haramaya.edu.et//hru/handle/123456789/8679</link>
<description>EVALUATION OF CHICKEN PRODUCTION PRACTICE, PERFORMANCE AND EGG QUALITY OF BOVANS BROWN AND SASSO CHICKENS IN DOBA DISTRICT, WEST HARARGHE ZONE, ETHIOPIA
Ahmed Beker Umere; Negassi Ameha (PhD); Tibebu Manaye (PhD)
The study was conducted with the objective of evaluating the chicken husbandry practices,&#13;
productive performance, and egg quality of Bovans brown and Sasso chickens in Doba District.&#13;
A total of 160 households were purposively selected and interviewed using semi-structured&#13;
questionnaires. For the evaluation of egg qualities, a total of 160 freshly laid eggs were used.&#13;
SPSS and JMP® pro version 17 (SAS Institute, 2023) were employed to analyze the data. The&#13;
age at first egg for the Sasso chicken was 5.77 months, and for the Bovans brown chicken, it&#13;
was 5.38 months. The average number of eggs per hen per year for the Bovans brown chicken&#13;
was 248.86, which was higher as compared to the Sasso chicken, which was 227.32. A&#13;
significant difference (P&lt; 0.05) was observed between chicken breeds and agroecologies in&#13;
terms of the pullet's age at first egg and the total number of eggs produced per year, with higher&#13;
results in midland than in the highland agroecology of the study area. The female body weights&#13;
of Sasso and Bovans brown chickens greater than 20 weeks of age was higher in the midlands,&#13;
and the Sasso breed performed higher than Bovans brown chickens. The results indicated that&#13;
egg quality traits with a significant difference (P&lt;0.05) between the two agro-ecologies in terms&#13;
of egg weight, egg length, shell weight, shell thickness, yolk weight, yolk color, yolk height, yolk&#13;
diameter, and albumen weight of eggs collected from midland were higher than those of eggs&#13;
from highland. However, the highest values for albumen height and Haugh unit were observed&#13;
on eggs collected from highland. There was a significant difference (P&lt;0.05) between eggs&#13;
collected from the Sasso chicken with higher values than Bovans brown eggs in terms of egg&#13;
weight, egg width, shell weight, egg length, albumin weight, yolk color, and yolk weight. In&#13;
general, the Sasso and Bovans brown chickens perform relatively better in midland for egg&#13;
production, growth performance, and most of the egg quality traits than highland agro-ecology.&#13;
The prevalence of disease, predators, inadequate veterinary services, a lack of housing, and a&#13;
shortage of supplementary feeds were the major constraints on chicken production. Therefore we recommend that there should be appropriate intervention in disease and predator control&#13;
activities, an improved housing system, a feeding system, and a vaccination of chicken to be&#13;
promoted in the study areas.
101p.
</description>
<pubDate>Mon, 01 Apr 2024 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<guid isPermaLink="false">http://ir.haramaya.edu.et//hru/handle/123456789/8679</guid>
<dc:date>2024-04-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
</item>
<item>
<title>SCAVENGING AND SMALL-SCALE INTENSIVE CHICKEN PRODUCTION PRACTICES, EGG QUALITY ANALYSIS, AND MARKETING SYSTEM IN AND AROUND JIGJIGA CITY</title>
<link>http://ir.haramaya.edu.et//hru/handle/123456789/8675</link>
<description>SCAVENGING AND SMALL-SCALE INTENSIVE CHICKEN PRODUCTION PRACTICES, EGG QUALITY ANALYSIS, AND MARKETING SYSTEM IN AND AROUND JIGJIGA CITY
Osman Abdullahi Jama; Negassi Ameha (PhD); Meseret Girma (PhD)
The study was conducted to assess and evaluate production practices, marketing systems, and&#13;
egg quality traits of small-scale intensive and backyard chicken production in and around&#13;
Jigjiga city. The study was thus composed of a survey and egg quality examination of local and&#13;
exotic chickens reared under an intensive and scavenging production system. Hence, 160 households under the backyard system with four strata and 10 from the small-scale intensive system&#13;
were involved in the survey. SAS and JMP pro version (9.4) were statistical software tools used&#13;
to analyze the data and the chi-square test was used to analyze the categorical variables while&#13;
ANOVA was used to analyze continuous variables. The results indicated that the majority of&#13;
respondents in the study area were male in the 1&#13;
st and 4th strata and in all strata their ages fall&#13;
between 41 and 50 while their educational attainment is predominantly low among respondents,&#13;
with many being illiterate or having only primary education. In terms of chicken production&#13;
practices the first strata represent 30% of households that still rely on traditional scavenging&#13;
while 47.5%, 70%, and 72.5 respectively in 2nd, 3rd,&#13;
and 4th strata shows semi-scavenging systems. The housing conditions and practices for chicken rearing across four strata, which significantly different across the strata (χ2-test= 4.740, P&lt;0.05) based on the number of chickens&#13;
kept by each household. Results show a significant difference in egg production per year/hen&#13;
across the four strata, with the fourth strata producing the highest average of 54.90±1.02 eggs&#13;
per hen per year, while the third strata produced the lowest, at 49.12 ±1.29 eggs per hen (p =&#13;
0.001). The correlation relationships between various external egg quality traits for exotic and&#13;
indigenous chickens reveal distinct patterns. In exotic chickens egg weight is significantly correlated with shell weight (r = 0.4428, p &lt; .0001) and egg width (r = 0.3063, p = .0057), indicating that heavier eggs tend to have heavier shells and greater width. On the other hand, for&#13;
Indigenous chickens, egg weight shows very strong correlations with both egg length (r =&#13;
0.8735, p &lt; .0001) and width (r = 0.5896, p &lt; .0001), suggesting that heavier eggs tend to be&#13;
longer and wider. Indigenous chickens showed significantly (P&lt;0.05) lower mean values in egg&#13;
weight (42.450±0.25) and shell weight (3.625±0.062) compared to exotic breeds, which exhibited 68 higher values (61.837a±0.23 for egg weight and 6.151±0.066 for shell weight), indicating breed effects as a key determinant in these traits. Exotic breeds showed a higher mean albumin height (5.665±0.154 mm) compared to Indigenous breeds (4.856±0.154 mm), with the&#13;
breed (B) showing a significant effect (p=0.000), indicating that genetic factors influence albu min height. Production type (P) and interaction effects (B x P) were non-significant (p=0.255,&#13;
p=0.708), suggesting that albumin height remains relatively stable across intensive and backyard systems within each breed. The study's holistic approach provides valuable guidance for&#13;
policymakers and development practitioners seeking to strengthen the poultry industry. Promoting controlled breeding programs, improving disease management, and leveraging gendersensitive extension services crucial to develop the poultry industry in the study area. By addressing the multifaceted challenges facing chicken producers, this research paves the way for&#13;
a more resilient and equitable poultry value chain in Jigjiga and beyond.
108p.
</description>
<pubDate>Wed, 01 Jan 2025 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<guid isPermaLink="false">http://ir.haramaya.edu.et//hru/handle/123456789/8675</guid>
<dc:date>2025-01-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
</item>
<item>
<title>ASSESSEMENT OF HUSBANDRY AND BREEDING PRACTICES  OF NUER COMMUNITY FOR ABIGAR CATTLE IN LARE AND  JIKAWO DISTRICTS, GAMBELLA REGION, ETHIOPIA</title>
<link>http://ir.haramaya.edu.et//hru/handle/123456789/8322</link>
<description>ASSESSEMENT OF HUSBANDRY AND BREEDING PRACTICES  OF NUER COMMUNITY FOR ABIGAR CATTLE IN LARE AND  JIKAWO DISTRICTS, GAMBELLA REGION, ETHIOPIA
Koang Gatbel Tut; Yosef Tadesse (PhD); Moges Dereje (PhD)
The Study was conducted to assess cattle husbandry and breeding practices of Nuer &#13;
Community for (Abigar) cattle in two districts of Gambella Ethiopia. Multi-stage purposive &#13;
sampling techniques were employed to select the districts and kebeles of the study area. &#13;
Random sampling was employed to select the households. Focus group discussion and &#13;
structured questionnaires were used to collect data from 160 households. Data were &#13;
analyzed using SAS version 9 and SPSS.   The study result indicated that cattle production in &#13;
the study area had significant role in socio economic condition of the farmers and being used &#13;
as a source of income, prestige of household in the community, marriage and others. More &#13;
than half of the respondents reported that Abigar cattle relatively have better level of &#13;
tolerance or resistance to most of the existing stress as compared to the other cattle breeds in &#13;
the region which ranges from 63.8% for heat tolerance to 71.2 % for withstanding feed &#13;
shortage. From the observation of the research location the common breeding system was &#13;
herd mating and natural controlled-breeding. The age at puberty for female Abigar cattle &#13;
was found to be in the range of 34 to 40 months on average and the mean age at first calving &#13;
was found to be 47.4 to 51.3 months. Average daily milk was to be 2.1± 0.2 liters. Natural &#13;
mating was the dominant breeding method and animal were selected majorly based on their &#13;
Physical appearances.  According to elder and cattle owners of Lare and Jikawo, Nuer cattle &#13;
population trend were in increasing (60.6%) trend. River/Baro was the water source of the &#13;
cattle. Inaccessibility of veterinary services security, flood, cattle raiders, recurrent drought, &#13;
rangeland degradation, illegal cattle marketing was among the identified threats for the &#13;
decreasing trend of Abigar cattle in the study areas. The major animal production constraints &#13;
were animal health problem water scarcity and seasonal feed shortage. From the data the &#13;
prevalent disease in the study area are Trypanosomiasis, Anthrax, , CBPP, black leg. The &#13;
major cause of feed scarcity was lack of awareness on feed conservation methods for dry &#13;
season.  Hence, this study concludes that, training and extension services on husbandry, &#13;
breeding practices health care and feed conservation technologies should be undertaken by &#13;
different stakeholders in study area.
99p.
</description>
<pubDate>Sat, 01 Aug 2020 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
<guid isPermaLink="false">http://ir.haramaya.edu.et//hru/handle/123456789/8322</guid>
<dc:date>2020-08-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
</item>
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