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The role of indigenous knowledge and perceptions of pastoral communities on traditional grazing management in North-western Tanzania

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dc.creator Selemani, Ismail Saidi
dc.creator Eik, Lars Olav
dc.creator Holand, Øystein
dc.creator Ådnøy, Tormod
dc.creator Mtengeti, Ephraim
dc.creator Mushi, Daniel
dc.date 2022-05-06T12:01:22Z
dc.date 2022-05-06T12:01:22Z
dc.date 2012-10
dc.date.accessioned 2022-10-25T08:50:17Z
dc.date.available 2022-10-25T08:50:17Z
dc.identifier 1991-637X
dc.identifier https://www.suaire.sua.ac.tz/handle/123456789/4061
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/90016
dc.description Traditional forage conservation, locally known as “ngitili”, which involves retaining an area of standing vegetation from the beginning of rainy season and opening it up for grazing at the peak of dry season, has become an important strategy for rangeland rehabilitation in the north-western semi-arid part of Tanzania. The present study assessed the current rangeland management practices, the role of indigenous knowledge on ngitili conservation and perceptions of agropastoralists on communal resources management. Data were collected from a total of 10 villages of Shinyanga rural and Meatu district. Over 90% of villagers were agropastoralists, where the mean numbers of specific livestock per interviewed household were 51 cattle, 40 goats, 20 sheep and 7 horses. The two most important traditional rangeland management strategies practiced by agropastoralists in this region were ngitiliconservation and seasonal movement of livestock herds. Management of common resources was perceived to be problematic and most agro-pastoralists shifted from communal rangelands toward individual private ngitili. Interviewed agro-pastoralists claimed that, unequal sharing of benefits accrued from communal resources and poor management of communal ngitili lead to the preference of private ngitili to communal ones. The contribution of indigenous knowledge of Sukuma people lead to the success of ngitili conservation. However, the sustainability of this vital local knowledge is questionable. This paper recommends participatory management that allows integration of existing local knowledge in rangeland improvement.
dc.format application/pdf
dc.language en
dc.publisher Academic Journals
dc.subject Local knowledge
dc.subject Ngitili
dc.subject Rangeland degradation
dc.title The role of indigenous knowledge and perceptions of pastoral communities on traditional grazing management in North-western Tanzania
dc.type Article


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