dairy/livestock and the environment in tanzania
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Presented by Clavery Tungaraza at the CLEANED Project East Africa Stakeholder Consultation on Dairy and Environment Nairobi, Kenya, 18 September 2013TRANSCRIPT

Clavery Tungaraza
Faculty of science, Sokoine University of Agriculture, Morogoro, Tanzania
Dairy/livestock and the environment in Tanzania
CLEANED Project East Africa Stakeholder Consultation on Dairy and Environment Nairobi, Kenya, 18 September 2013

Dairy/livestock status
Livestock activities are mixed
19.1 million cattle found in Tanzania, 3rd in
Africa after Ethiopia and Sudan.
~605,000 are dairy cattle.
Others, raised for dual purpose of milk and
meat production.
Vision by 2015 to have 900,000 dairy cattle

Dairy/livestock status
Dairy not mentioned in National statistical figures but livestock
NAPA (National Adaptation Programme of
Action) never mentioned ‘Dairy’ but livestock

Tanzania is an agro-pastoralist country
Tanzania Mainland Z'bar
Number of Rural Agricultural households 5,838,523
5,706,329
132,193
Number of Households Growing Crops only 3,508,581
3,422,072
86,509
Number of Households Growing Crops and livestock 2,268,255
2,224,410
43,844
Number of Households with Livestock only 57,770 55,929
1,840
Number of Households doing Pastoralism 3,917 3,917 0

Status of the Environment
Climatic impacted country
Severe and recurrent droughts
drop of water levels of Lake Victoria, Lake
Tanganyika and Lake Jipe
recession of 7 km of Lake Rukwa in about 50 years

Impact to livestock
Shrinkage of rangelandFluctuation of product values,
eg. dry periods cattle price can fall from US$130 to US$13
Loss of animals sometimes massiveeg. In 2009 in Loliondo, Ngorongoro, Simanjiro, Kiteto and Mwanga there was total loss of over 150,000 animals.

Impact to livestock
Milk and meat Productivity and quality
fluctuate following climatic conditions
Pastoralist migration
Conflicts - Farmers v/s pastoralists


Country situation
Carrying Capacity
Region Existing
Recommended
Excess
Mwanza 2, 180,275 63,360 2,116, 915
Shinyanga 3, 806,677 87,800 3, 718, 877
Dodoma 798,105 160,167 637, 938
Singida 727,930 117,983 609, 947

Current Climate Zonation
Zone Sub-Zone and areas Rainfall (mm/yr)
1. COAST North: Tanga (except Lushoto), Coast and Dares Salaam
North: Bimodal, 750-1200mm
South: Eastern Lindi and Mtwara (except Makonde Plateau
South: Unimodal, 800-1200mm
2. ARID LANDS
North: Serengeti, Ngorogoro Parks, Part of Masailand
North: Unimodal, unreliable, 500-600mm
Masai Steppe, Tarangire Park, Mkomazi Reserve, Pangani and Eastern Dodoma
South: Unimodal and Unreliable, 400-600mm
3. SEMI-ARID LANDS
Central Dodoma, Singida,Northern Iringa, some of Arusha, Shinyanga Southern: Morogoro, Lindi and Southwest Mtwara
Central: unimodal and unreliable: 500-800mm Southeastern: Unimodal 600-800mm

4. PLATEAUX
Western: Tabora, Rukwa (North and Center), Mbeya North: Kigoma, Part of Mara Southern: Ruvuma and Southern Morogoro
Western: unimodal, 800-1000mm Southern: unimodal, veryreliable, 900-1300mm
5. SOUTHERN AND WESTERN HIGHLANDS
Southern: A broad ridge of from N. Morogoro to N. LakeNyasa, covering part of Iringa, MbeyaSouthwestern: Ufipa plateau inSumbawanga Western: Along the shore of Lake Tanganyika in Kigoma and Kagera
Southern: unimodal, reliable, local rain shadows, 800-1400mm Southern: unimodal, reliable, 800-1000mm Western: bimodal, 1000-2000mm
6. NOTHERN HIGHLANDS
Northern: foot of mt Kilimanjaro and Mt. Meru. Eastern Rift Valley to Eyasi Granite Mts Uluguru in Morogoro, Pare Mts in Kilimanjaro and Usambara Mts in Tanga, Tarime highlands in Mara
Northern: Bimodal, varies widely 1000-2000mm Granitic mts. Bimodal and very reliable 1000-2000m
7. ALLUVIAL PLAINS
K-kilomberao (Morogoro) R- Rufuji (Coast) U- Usangu (Mbeya) W- Wami(Morogoro)
K—Unimodal, very reliable, 900-1300mm R-Unimodal, often inadequate 800-1200mmU-Unimodal, 500-800mm W-Unimodal, 600-1800mm

Dominant zones for livestock keepers
2. ARID LANDS
North: Serengeti, Ngorogoro Parks, Part of Masailand
North: Unimodal, unreliable , 500-600mm
Masai Steppe, Tarangire Park, Mkomazi Reserve, Pangani and Eastern Dodoma
South: Unimodal and unreliable, 400-600mm
3. SEMI-ARID LANDS
Central Dodoma, Singida,Northern Iringa, some of Arusha, Shinyanga Southern: Morogoro Also Lindi and Southwest Mtwara
Central: unimodal and unreliable: 500-800mm Southeastern: Unimodal 600-800mm

Environmental Impacts
Globally livestock listed to cause;Land degradationAir pollutionClimate change
GHG emission (18%): 37% of methane, 9% of anthropogenic carbon dioxide emissions, and 65% of nitrous oxide
Exacerbate water shortage and water pollution, Loss of biodiversity through land use changeInfluence human behaviour based on milk and
meat consumption

Environmental Impacts
On the GHG contribution (Giga tonnes CO2 equivalent)
Land use and land use change: 2.5 -vegetation replaced by
pasture and carbon release from soils
Feed Production (except carbon released from soil): 0.4 -
including fossil fuel and chemical fertilizer application
Animal production: 1.9 -enteric fermentation from ruminants
(CH4) and on-farm fossil fuel use (CO2)
Manure Management: 2.2 -manure storage, application and
deposition (CH4, N2O, NH3)
Processing and transport: 0.03 -fuel

Challenges of assessing Environmental Impacts
Lack of environmental baselineDifficulties in assessing size of pasture land due
to grazing nature –migration & nomadicDeforestation based method difficulty due to crop
production deforestation activitiesVarying types of livestock feeds – not industrial
manufactured or input based productionPasture land not well-selected -the nomadic lifePasture dependent on natural land fertilityMixed feeds; pasture-grass-feeding vs. grain-
feeding