Hussein T. Wario
University of Kassel
5 Papers
Hussein T. Wario is an academic researcher from University of Kassel. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pastoralism & Grazing. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 3 publications.
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Papers
Dynamics of pastoral traditional ecological knowledge: a global state-of-the-art review
TL;DR: In this article , a systematic literature review of 288 scientific studies on pastoral traditional ecological knowledge is presented, focusing specifically on 61 papers that explicitly mention one of the four types of knowledge transition (i.e., retention, erosion, adaptation, or hybridization).
Shaping the Herders' "Mental Maps": Participatory Mapping with Pastoralists' to Understand Their Grazing Area Differentiation and Characterization.
TL;DR: approaching grazing area differentiation from the pastoralists’ perspectives improves the understanding of rangeland characteristics that pastoralists considered important in their grazing management and visualization of their mental representation in digital maps eases communication of this knowledge.
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Global principles in local traditional knowledge: A review of forage plant-livestock-herder interactions.
Abolfazl Sharifian,B. Gantuya,Hussein T. Wario,Marcin Kotowski,H Barani,Pablo Manzano,Saverio Krätli,Dániel Babai,Mária Bíró,László Sáfián,Jigjidsüren Erdenetsogt,Qorban Mohammad Qabel,Zsolt Molnár +12 more
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors analyzed the forage-related knowledge of pastoralists and herders by reviewing scientific papers and video documentaries on forage plants and indicators, their use in land management, and plant-livestock interactions.
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Responding to mobility constraints: Recent shifts in resource use practices and herding strategies in the Borana pastoral system, southern Ethiopia
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated how Borana pastoralists of southern Ethiopia have adapted resource use and livestock mobility practices amid multiple constraints including rising population, loss of rangeland to other pastoral communities and changing access rights, among others.
Reproductive performance and herd growth potentials of cattle in the Borana pastoral system, southern Ethiopia
TL;DR: Investigation of cattle reared in three ecologically varied zones of Golbo, Malbe and Dirre in the Borana rangelands with different levels of mobility constraints concluded that reduced pastoral mobility that affected resource access across ecological zones can compromise the reproductive performance and hence the growth potential of cattle populations.