Characterizing Livestock Markets, Primary Diseases, and Key Management Practices Along the Livestock Supply Chain in Cameroon



Motta, Paolo, Porphyre, Thibaud, Handel, Ian G, Hamman, Saidou M, Ngwa, Victor Ngu, Tanya, Vincent N, Morgan, Kenton L and Bronsvoort, B Mark de C
(2019) Characterizing Livestock Markets, Primary Diseases, and Key Management Practices Along the Livestock Supply Chain in Cameroon. FRONTIERS IN VETERINARY SCIENCE, 6 (APR). 101-.

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Abstract

Live animal markets are common hotspots for the dispersal of multiple infectious diseases in various production systems globally. In Cameroon livestock trade occurs predominantly via a system of livestock markets. Improving the understanding of the risks associated with livestock trade systems and markets is, therefore, key to design targeted and evidence-based interventions. In the current study, official transaction records for a 12-month period were collected from 62 livestock markets across Central and Southern Cameroon, in combination with a questionnaire-based survey with the livestock markets stakeholders. The available information collected at these markets was used to characterize their structural and functional organization. Based on trade volume, cattle price and the intensity of stakeholder attendance, four main classes of livestock markets were identified. Despite an evident hierarchical structure of the system, a relatively limited pool of infectious diseases was consistently reported as predominant across market classes, highlighting homogeneous disease risks along the livestock supply chain. Conversely, the variable livestock management practices reported (e.g., traded species, husbandry practices, and transhumance habits) highlighted diverse potential risks for disease dissemination among market classes. Making use of readily available commercial information at livestock markets, this study describes a rapid approach for market characterization and classification. Simultaneously, this study identifies primary diseases and management practices at risk and provides the opportunity to inform evidence-based and strategic communication, surveillance and control approaches aiming at mitigating these risks for diseases dissemination through the livestock supply chain in Cameroon.

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: livestock markets, infectious diseases, management practices, Cameroon, supply chain
Depositing User: Symplectic Admin
Date Deposited: 21 May 2019 08:38
Last Modified: 19 Jan 2023 00:45
DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2019.00101
Related URLs:
URI: https://livrepository.liverpool.ac.uk/id/eprint/3041444