2022
DOI: 10.1007/s13593-021-00723-x
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Knowns and unknowns of cattle grazing in oil palm plantations. A review

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Cited by 7 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Initially, cattle were introduced into oil palm plantations to control understorey weeds but were later farmed systematically to produce beef commercially (Azizol & Norlizan, 2004; Chen, 1990; Kabul, 2008). Many plantation managers, however, are reluctant to implement oil palm systems with integrated cattle browsing because of increased staff workload, cost of hiring new staff and purchasing new devices for cattle husbandry, the potential for soil compaction or damage to drainage systems, concern over livestock theft and security issue, and concern to focus on the core plantation business (Bremer, de Bruyn, Smith, & Cowley, 2022; Wong, 1998; Zamri‐Saad & Azhar, 2015). Also, both in tropical pasture grazing systems and OPSC systems, there is a general lack of data and analytical tools to guide managers on basic questions like the stocking rate of cattle in plantations of various ages to provide appropriate feed allocation for cattle.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Initially, cattle were introduced into oil palm plantations to control understorey weeds but were later farmed systematically to produce beef commercially (Azizol & Norlizan, 2004; Chen, 1990; Kabul, 2008). Many plantation managers, however, are reluctant to implement oil palm systems with integrated cattle browsing because of increased staff workload, cost of hiring new staff and purchasing new devices for cattle husbandry, the potential for soil compaction or damage to drainage systems, concern over livestock theft and security issue, and concern to focus on the core plantation business (Bremer, de Bruyn, Smith, & Cowley, 2022; Wong, 1998; Zamri‐Saad & Azhar, 2015). Also, both in tropical pasture grazing systems and OPSC systems, there is a general lack of data and analytical tools to guide managers on basic questions like the stocking rate of cattle in plantations of various ages to provide appropriate feed allocation for cattle.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%