Volume 41, Issue 4, February 2024, Pages 1081–1087
Justin NYANGEZI TABAYE1, Justin ZIGASHANE KULIMUSHI2, Carus ASIFIWE BUHENDWA3, Rosine NTAKWINJA LUFUNGULO4, Claudien IRAGI HAMULI5, and Cishesa Thierry HERI6
1 Institut Supérieur de Techniques de Dévelopment de Kalehe, Department of Environment and Sustainable Development, South Kivu, RD Congo
2 Institut Supérieur des Etudes Agronomiques et Vétérinaires (ISEAV-Walungu), Department of Agrovetérinaire, South Kivu, RD Congo
3 Institut Supérieur des Etudes Agronomiques et Vétérinaires (ISEAV-Walungu), Department of Agrovetérinaire, South Kivu, RD Congo
4 Institut Supérieur de Techniques de Dévelopment de Kalehe, Department of Environment and Sustainable Development, South Kivu, RD Congo
5 Institut Supérieur de Développement Rural de Kaziba (ISDR-KAZIBA), Planning Department, South Kivu, RD Congo
6 Section Agro vétérinaire, Institut Supérieur d'Etudes Agronomiques et Vétérinaires (ISEAV/ WALUNGU), Bukavu, Sud Kivu, RD Congo
Original language: English
Copyright © 2024 ISSR Journals. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
This work focuses on the status of the feeding system for pigs reared in the Mbinga-Sud group, Kalehe territory, in South Kivu. He made use of a survey questionnaire with a section of questions to collect the raw data then encoding them finally to produce graphs to produce. The results show that 96% of breeders find that the feeding system of pigs reared in the Mbinga-South group is dominated by conventional feed that pigs pick up during scavenging. Regarding the types of simple food available in the Mbinga-Sud group to feed pigs semi-intensively, 44% of farmers show that green fodder and particularly cassava leaves (sombe) are the most used, 30% affirm that tubers and roots occupy second place, 17% of respondents distribute waste cereal flour and cassava; finally, the 9% indicates the banana constitutes for them a food to provide energy to the pigs. As for the breeding system resulting from a feeding system, the results show that in pig breeding in the Mbinga-Sud group, only 9% of breeders say that breeding is practiced in pigsties or cages; the 61% show that rearing on ties or stakes in a semi-intensive breading system but with the level of rudimentary technicality for the production of pigs; 28% of breeders opt for the supply of food from agricultural residues and remains and 2% practice semi-industrial breeding.
Author Keywords: System, feed, pig, Kalehe, South Kivu.
Justin NYANGEZI TABAYE1, Justin ZIGASHANE KULIMUSHI2, Carus ASIFIWE BUHENDWA3, Rosine NTAKWINJA LUFUNGULO4, Claudien IRAGI HAMULI5, and Cishesa Thierry HERI6
1 Institut Supérieur de Techniques de Dévelopment de Kalehe, Department of Environment and Sustainable Development, South Kivu, RD Congo
2 Institut Supérieur des Etudes Agronomiques et Vétérinaires (ISEAV-Walungu), Department of Agrovetérinaire, South Kivu, RD Congo
3 Institut Supérieur des Etudes Agronomiques et Vétérinaires (ISEAV-Walungu), Department of Agrovetérinaire, South Kivu, RD Congo
4 Institut Supérieur de Techniques de Dévelopment de Kalehe, Department of Environment and Sustainable Development, South Kivu, RD Congo
5 Institut Supérieur de Développement Rural de Kaziba (ISDR-KAZIBA), Planning Department, South Kivu, RD Congo
6 Section Agro vétérinaire, Institut Supérieur d'Etudes Agronomiques et Vétérinaires (ISEAV/ WALUNGU), Bukavu, Sud Kivu, RD Congo
Original language: English
Copyright © 2024 ISSR Journals. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Abstract
This work focuses on the status of the feeding system for pigs reared in the Mbinga-Sud group, Kalehe territory, in South Kivu. He made use of a survey questionnaire with a section of questions to collect the raw data then encoding them finally to produce graphs to produce. The results show that 96% of breeders find that the feeding system of pigs reared in the Mbinga-South group is dominated by conventional feed that pigs pick up during scavenging. Regarding the types of simple food available in the Mbinga-Sud group to feed pigs semi-intensively, 44% of farmers show that green fodder and particularly cassava leaves (sombe) are the most used, 30% affirm that tubers and roots occupy second place, 17% of respondents distribute waste cereal flour and cassava; finally, the 9% indicates the banana constitutes for them a food to provide energy to the pigs. As for the breeding system resulting from a feeding system, the results show that in pig breeding in the Mbinga-Sud group, only 9% of breeders say that breeding is practiced in pigsties or cages; the 61% show that rearing on ties or stakes in a semi-intensive breading system but with the level of rudimentary technicality for the production of pigs; 28% of breeders opt for the supply of food from agricultural residues and remains and 2% practice semi-industrial breeding.
Author Keywords: System, feed, pig, Kalehe, South Kivu.
How to Cite this Article
Justin NYANGEZI TABAYE, Justin ZIGASHANE KULIMUSHI, Carus ASIFIWE BUHENDWA, Rosine NTAKWINJA LUFUNGULO, Claudien IRAGI HAMULI, and Cishesa Thierry HERI, “Overview of the feeding system for pigs raised in Kalehe territory, South Kivu, Democratic Republic of Congo,” International Journal of Innovation and Applied Studies, vol. 41, no. 4, pp. 1081–1087, February 2024.