Question
Question: How do good animal husbandry practices benefit farmers?...
How do good animal husbandry practices benefit farmers?
Solution
The benefits of animal husbandry practices to farmers are the improvement of breeds, increases in yields such as milk, meat, eggs. It helps the farmers for proper management of animals like providing them good food, shelter, and protection against a variety of diseases.
Complete answer:
The branch of agriculture is concerned with domesticated animals such as livestock for their eggs, meat, milk, fiber, etc.., It includes proper maintenance, selective breeding, and raising of livestock.
Animal husbandry practices are beneficial to farmers in the following ways including:
- Improvement in selective breeding of domesticated animals.
- Increase in yield of products such as meat, eggs, and milk.
- Proper maintenance such as providing clean shelter, feed hygienic and balanced diet, preventing the livestock from disease and disease-causing agents, improves maximum yield.
In animal husbandry, cattle farming is the most beneficial method for farmers. In cattle farming other than the products of milk-related products, the breeds also engaged in agriculture fields for labor works such as irrigation, tilling, carting, etc..,
By improving the practices of animal husbandry, the demands for meat, milk, eggs are also reduced. Along with agriculture, Indian farmers practice animal-based farming by employing animal husbandry practices.
Some other benefits such as the yield of fuel, fertilizer, clothing, drought power, transport are also increased.
Increased survival of offspring, better growth, better production, better reproduction, better profit is also the benefits of practicing good animal husbandry practices.
Note:
The branches of animal husbandry include dairy farming [domestication of cow, sheep, camel, for their milk, meat, and other related products], Poultry farming [domestication of birds such as chicken, duck, goose, quail, turkeys for their eggs, meat and other products], Aquaculture [farming of aquatic organisms such as fish, prawn, mollusks for meat and other products], Sericulture [domestication of silkworms for the production of silk], and Apiculture [domestication of bees for honey, wax, etc..,].