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International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI) 2014

African Chicken Genetic Gains (ACGG

Chickens, genetics, poultry

International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI) – CGIAR

Titre : African Chicken Genetic Gains (ACGG)

Regions : Eastern and Southern Africa West Africa

Date : From Nov 2014 To Oct 2019

ILRI Research Programs  : Livestock genetics

Description
African Chicken Genetic Gains is an Africa-wide collaboration led by the International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI). In November 2014, ILRI and partners initiated this new collaboration to provide better chickens to smallholder farmers in Africa. Part of the wider ‘LiveGene‘ initiative, ACGG tests and makes available high-producing, farmer-preferred genotypes that increase smallholder chicken productivity in Africa. The program will improve chicken genetics and the delivery of adapted chickens to support poverty reduction, productivity growth, increased household animal protein intake, and the empowerment of women farmers in rural communities.

Beyond the target countries – Ethiopia, Nigeria, Tanzania – the germplasm, data, and knowledge generated have the potential to impact millions of poor rural and peri-urban households in other countries with large backyard chicken production. In Africa, chicken production is integral in nearly all poor rural smallholder households. Family chickens produce meat and eggs for home consumption and they are a source of income. Many past efforts to make smallholder chicken production more productive in sub-Saharan Africa have failed to deliver impact because they tried to use high-producing genotypes created for intensive temperate feeding systems.

These exotic birds are often not suited to local conditions and demanded high investments in feeds, veterinary support and energy, while local breeds were overlooked. The difference today is that we can combine new genetics, improved local breeds, and enhanced delivery systems to produce high-producing but low-feed-input birds, prevaccinated and suited to local conditions.

Partenaire (s)  : PICO Eastern Africa Tanzania Livestock Research Institute

Financement : Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

ILRI

Page publiée le 13 août 2019