Impact of participatory silvipastoral intervention and soil conservation measures for forage resource enhancement in western Himalaya


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Authors

  • INDER DEV NRCAF, Jhansi, Uttar Pradesh 284 003
  • SUDESH RADOTRA Indian Grassland and Fodder Research Institute, Regional Research Centre, CSK HPKV Campus, Palampur, Himachal Pradesh 176 062
  • O P S KHOLA CSWCR & & TI, Research Centre, Udhagamandalam, Tamil Nadu 643 004
  • BIMAL MISRI Indian Grassland and Fodder Research Institute, Regional Research Centre, CSK HPKV Campus, Palampur, Himachal Pradesh 176 062
  • SINDHU SAREEN DWR, Karnal, Haryana 132 001
  • J P SINGH IGFRI, Jhansi, Uttar Pradesh 284 003
  • A K SRIVASTAVA VPKAS, Almora, Uttarakhand 263 601
  • BHUPINDER SINGH IVRI, Palampur, Himachal Pradesh 176 061
  • S K SHARMA CSWCR and TI, Dehra Dun, Uttarakhand 248 195
  • K P CHAMOLI IGFRI, Regional Centre, Palampur, Himachal Pradesh 176 062
  • DINESH KUMAR IGFRI, Regional Centre, Palampur, Himachal Pradesh 176 062

https://doi.org/10.56093/ijas.v84i3.38584

Keywords:

Fodder trees, Herbage, Himalaya, Livestock, PRA, Silvipasture, Soil conservation

Abstract

Livestock rearing is an important component of rural economy in mid-hills of Himalaya. Inspite of abundant available feed resources, total available biomass is insufficient to sustain the livestock population. Fodder trees particularly in hill ecosystem play an important role in supplementing the fodder requirement especially during the lean period. Information gathered and analysis concludes that Grewia optiva is the most important fodder tree in terms of dominance, palatability and increase in milk yield followed by Artocarpus chaplasha, Morus alba, Bauhinia variegata, Albizia lebbeck and Terminalia alata in Kangra and Mandi districts of Himachal Pradesh. The crude protein content was found highest in Grewia optiva (19.38%) followed by Albizia lebbeck (18.85%), Dendrocalamus hamiltonii (18.01%) and minimum in case of Quercus incana (9.27%). During scarcity of fodder Ficus religiosa is the only fodder tree fed throughout the year. The established silvipasture produced leaf biomass of 2.77 to 6.77 DM kg/tree (Ghanetta), 2.12 to 5.96 DM kg/tree (Jogindernagar) and 2.25 to 6.93 DM kg/tree (Dagoh). Fodder trees planted under silvipastoral system produced average biomass of 1.83 DM tonnes/ha (Ghanetta), 1.49 DM tonnes/ha (Jogindernagar) and 1.66 DM tonnes/ha (Dagoh). Rainfall events of more than 50 mm, though quite less in number (25/165, 24/192 and 17/149), contributed 47.7, 82.3 and 81.7% to the total runoff at Ghanetta, Jogindernagar and Dagoh, respectively. Among the resource conservation measures trenching in combination with vegetative barrier allowed only 8.2% of rain as runoff compared to 41.5% under control (no measure). The silvipasture systems coupled with contour staggered trenches and / or vegetative barrier can effectively arrest the environmental degradation.

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References

Das N. 2009. Tree as a source of fodder for livestock in India. (In) Forage for Sustainable Livestock Production, pp 674. Das N, Singh K K and Das M M (Eds.). Satish Serial Publishing House, Delhi.

Dev I, Misri B and Pathania M S. 2006. Forage demand and supply in western Himalaya: A balance sheet for Himachal Pradesh. Indian Journal of Animal Sciences 76 (9): 720–6.

Dev I, Misri B, Radotra S, Sareen S and Pathania M S. 2009. Livestock scenario and socio-economic profile of an alpine area in western Himalaya. Indian Journal of Animal Sciences. 79 (8): 824–8.

Dev I, Radotra S, Singh J P, Pathania M S and Sareen S. 2011. Role of farmwomen in forage based livestock production system in north-western Himalaya. Range Management and Agroforestry 32 (2): 124–30.

Dev I, Khola, O P S, Radotra S, Sareen S, Misri B, Srivastava A K and Sharma S K. 2012. Silvipastoral approach to improve productivity of native pastures for improved livestock production in mid hills of Western Himalaya. Indian Journal of Animal Sciences 82 (11): 1 392–7.

Katoch R. 2009. Tree fodder: An alternative source of quality fodder in Himachal Pradesh. Journal of Range Management and Agroforestry 30 (1): 16–24.

Pathania M S and Dev I. 2011. Fodder supply from private lands in two agroclimatic zones of Himachal Pradesh. Indian Journal of Animal Sciences 81 (7): 740–3.

Singh J P, Roy M M and Radotra S. 2009. Grasslands of Himachal Pradesh. Indian Grassland and Fodder Research Institute, Jhansi (UP), pp 65.

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Submitted

2014-03-04

Published

2014-03-04

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Articles

How to Cite

DEV, I., RADOTRA, S., KHOLA, O. P. S., MISRI, B., SAREEN, S., SINGH, J. P., SRIVASTAVA, A. K., SINGH, B., SHARMA, S. K., CHAMOLI, K. P., & KUMAR, D. (2014). Impact of participatory silvipastoral intervention and soil conservation measures for forage resource enhancement in western Himalaya. The Indian Journal of Agricultural Sciences, 84(3), 365–70. https://doi.org/10.56093/ijas.v84i3.38584
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