Despite worldwide trends towards intensive livestock production, some extensive systems retain comparative advantages, particularly in arid regions. In such variable environments, the extent to which natural pastures can contribute to animal nutrition depends on how livestock are distributed with respect to forage resources in time and space. Animal movements are governed by the interactions of bio-physical, economic and institutional drivers and constraints, all of which are dynamic in time and space, making disentangling the relative importance of different drivers challenging. We examine a large migratory system in central Kazakhstan, using unique long-term data in the context of major socio-economic change, to explore the changing role ...
This paper presents an overview of the livestock sector in Central Asia using national statistics an...
This thesis looks at the major factors, both environmental and institutional, which haye affected p...
© 2019 Hankerson et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative C...
Despite worldwide trends towards intensive livestock production, some extensive systems retain compa...
There have been studies on how pastoralists assess and choose the resources required for their lives...
There is little research on pastoralists’ responses to new expansion opportunities. We explore how p...
We examine factors regulating numbers of domestic livestock and saiga an-telopes during the major pe...
We examine factors regulating numbers of domestic livestock and saiga antelopes during the major per...
A nomadic way of life has long been a defining characteristic of the Kazak people, both in the imagi...
This study explores the drivers of site selection amongst livestock owners under conditions of incre...
Livestock mobility was an essential characteristic of Kazakh livestock production systems, allowing ...
The rangelands of Kazakhstan were historically used for nomadic pastoralism, with long migrations to...
Seasonal and spatial fluctuations in forage quality, accessibility and output provide strong incenti...
After the breakup of the Soviet Union, the republics of Central Asia began to restructure their agri...
Kazakhstan contains a large share of the world’s remaining “near-natural” temperate grassland, so ho...
This paper presents an overview of the livestock sector in Central Asia using national statistics an...
This thesis looks at the major factors, both environmental and institutional, which haye affected p...
© 2019 Hankerson et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative C...
Despite worldwide trends towards intensive livestock production, some extensive systems retain compa...
There have been studies on how pastoralists assess and choose the resources required for their lives...
There is little research on pastoralists’ responses to new expansion opportunities. We explore how p...
We examine factors regulating numbers of domestic livestock and saiga an-telopes during the major pe...
We examine factors regulating numbers of domestic livestock and saiga antelopes during the major per...
A nomadic way of life has long been a defining characteristic of the Kazak people, both in the imagi...
This study explores the drivers of site selection amongst livestock owners under conditions of incre...
Livestock mobility was an essential characteristic of Kazakh livestock production systems, allowing ...
The rangelands of Kazakhstan were historically used for nomadic pastoralism, with long migrations to...
Seasonal and spatial fluctuations in forage quality, accessibility and output provide strong incenti...
After the breakup of the Soviet Union, the republics of Central Asia began to restructure their agri...
Kazakhstan contains a large share of the world’s remaining “near-natural” temperate grassland, so ho...
This paper presents an overview of the livestock sector in Central Asia using national statistics an...
This thesis looks at the major factors, both environmental and institutional, which haye affected p...
© 2019 Hankerson et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative C...