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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
In the next two decades, the world population will increase significantly; the majority in the developing countries located in the
tropics of Africa, Asia, Latin America, and the Caribbean. To feed such a population, it is necessary to increase the availability of
food, particularly high-value animal protein foods produced locally, namely meat and dairy products. Dairy production in tropical
regions has a lot of growth potential, but also poses a series of problems, particularly as dairy production systems were developed
in temperate countries and in most cases are difficult to implement in the tropics. Drawbacks include hot weather and heat stress,
the lack of availability of adequate feeds, poor infrastructure, and cold chain and the competition with cheap imports from
temperate countries. This position paper reviews the major drawbacks in dairy production for the five major dairy species: cattle,
water buffalo, sheep, goat, and camel, as well as the future trends in research and development. It also concerns the major trends
in reproduction and production systems and health issues as well as environmental concerns, particularly those related to
greenhouse gas emissions. Tropical Animal Health and Production now launches a topical collection on Tropical Dairy
Science. We aim to publish interesting and significant papers in tropical dairy science. On behalf of the editorial board of the
Tropical Animal Health and Production, we would like to invite all authors working in this field to submit their works on this
topic to this topical collection in our journal
Description
Editorial
Keywords
dairy science health tropics
Pedagogical Context
Citation
Tropical Animal Health and Production (2019) 51:1009–1017
Publisher
Springer