The Journal of Agriculture and Natural Resources Sciences
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<p>The Journal of Agriculture and Natural Resources Sciences (TJANRS) is an international scientific journal and publishes original papers, short communications, reviews and etc.</p><p><strong>The journal covers all related topics of Agriculture and Natural Resources Sciences</strong>. Papers are welcome reporting studies in all aspects of Agriculture and Natural Resources Sciences including:</p><ul><li>Entomology</li><li>Fisheries, Wildlife and Conservation Biology</li><li>Forest Resources</li><li>Water and Climate Science</li><li>Tourism Center</li><li>Water Resources Center</li><li>Animal Science</li><li>Food Science and Nutrition</li><li>Agronomy and Plant Genetics</li><li>Horticultural Science </li><li>Agricultural Education and Communications (such as Interdisciplinary Agriculture ,Agricultural Communications , Agricultural Education, Agricultural Leadership , etc )</li><li>Agricultural and Applied Economics</li><li>Conservation Law Enforcement</li><li>Wildlife, Aquatic, and Wildlands Science and Management</li><li>Plant and Soil Science (such as Environmental Crop and Soil Sciences, Horticultural and Turfgrass Sciences, Plant Protection, Graduate Certificate in Crop Protection, Fibers and Biopolymers, Horticultural Landscape Management , Soil Management ,Plant Biology, Plant Pathology , etc )</li><li>Other related topics Agriculture and Natural Resources Sciences</li></ul><p><strong><br /></strong></p>World Science and Research publishingen-USThe Journal of Agriculture and Natural Resources Sciences2423-4397uthors shall complete the Manuscript Submission and Copyright Release form for each new manuscript submission. The form is completed during the submission process through Manuscript Central. Person's unable complete copyright agreements, such as federal employees, must indicate the reason for exemption on the form. Persons who wish to reproduce material in TJANRS must request written permission to reprint copyrighted information from the managing editor. Likewise, authors of TJANRS manuscripts who include material (usually tables or figures) taken from other copyrighted sources must secure permission from the copyright holders and provide evidence of this permission at the time the manuscript is submit- ted to TJANRSfor review. Tables or figures reproduced from the work of others must include an acknowledgment of the original source in a footnote or legend.<div class="separator"> </div>The Impact of Marketing System on Cattle Welfare in Dambi Dollo and Geba Robi Markets
http://journals.wsrpublishing.com/index.php/tjanrs/article/view/558
<p>Cattle welfare is influenced by several factors, including Lack of food, water, shelter, rest, and convenient transportation. The purpose of this study was to assess the impact of marketing systems on cattle welfare. The study was conducted in D/Dollo and G/Robi towns in Kellem Wollega Zone, Ethiopia. During the study period, 60 respondents were selected randomly and data was collected through direct observation, interview, and semi-structured questionnaires. The majority age of respondents ranged from 31-45 (53.3%) and the analysis for educational status disclosed that 46.7% of the respondents were illiterates. Most of the market actors in the study area were farmers which covered 51.7% and 46.7% of total sellers and buyers, respectively. About 65% of the respondents confirmed that the price of cattle is set by negotiation between buyers and sellers. Abusive handling by stakeholders was the most frequently observed behavior (48% and 45%) at D/Dollo and G/Robi markets, respectively. The highest expressed abusive behaviors by stakeholders were beating of the body by the stick at 45% and 48% at D/Dollo and G/Robi markets, respectively. The aggressive behavior of the animals due to human intervention at D/Dollo and G/Robi accounts for about 37% and 42%, respectively. The stress-related behavior that was observed at the highest extent in both markets was moving forward by 31% and 28 for D/Dollo and G/Robi, respectively. The transportation system of cattle in the study area was mostly by foot 100% in D/Dollo and G/Robi towns. Hunger and thrust were leading welfare problems whereas naturalness is not the main problem. Lack of awareness with a frequency of 45% is the primary reason for the poor welfare conditions of cattle in the study area. Generally, the animal welfare at markets in the study area was very poor and animal transport conditions are inadequate. According to our findings most of the welfare problems were caused by a lack of awareness and carelessness of stakeholders.</p>Mohammed Yousuf EbroFiromsa Tarressa MilkiAbdi Yusuf MohammedSeyedmousa Hosseini
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2023-08-012023-08-01101115