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Blending traditional and new animal health solutions to support agro-pastoral livelihoods under climate change

School of Biological Sciences | PHD

Applications are now CLOSED
Funding
Funded
Reference Number
SBIO-2020-1093
Application Deadline
29 May 2020
Start Date
1 October 2020

Overview

Smallholder farmers in low income countries face unique and pressing challenges, in particular the need to adapt management to respond to climate change related threats, and to increase production efficiency without damaging environments that are often particularly sensitive. Challenges include harsher resource constraints (degraded land, erratic and scarce rainfall) and old and new climate-driven animal disease risks. Good solutions will be compatible with and draw upon traditional knowledge and practices. The project will address these challenges and farmer responses, focusing mainly on parasitic diseases of livestock, and help develop strategies for increasing resilience. Farmers in Africa as elsewhere have a deep resource of traditional knowledge and experience on which to draw when dealing with changing patterns of livestock disease and other threats. However, as climate change creates patterns unseen before, empirical solutions reach their limits. At the same time, tools for predicting disease challenge as a function of climate, and for intervening selectively to support animal health, welfare and production, have advanced considerably [e.g. see Refs.]. Rather than replacing traditional solutions with new science-based approaches, this project seeks to blend the two, forming new strategies that utilise the latest science in a way that is compatible with local conditions and available responses. The project will additionally seek to bridge the divide between animals and crops in building solutions, since this integration is key to resilience but often ignored in goal-orientated research.

The student will work within ongoing field-based projects to collect socio-economic characteristics and behavioural aspects of agro-pastoral populations, and data on animal health management from participants in Malawi and Uganda, alongside information on the epidemiology of major endemic animal diseases. Using this information, the project will explore how traditional approaches such as grazing management and plant-based ‘nutraceuticals’ might be adapted using modern scientific understanding, forming the basis of focal intervention studies. Results will be used to co-create socially, economically and environmentally sustainable solutions for improved animal health and family livelihoods.

The outcomes of this project will strengthen the livelihood of agro-pastoral communities, enhancing the making and diffusion of research-driven strategies to cope with climate related animal health issues. The data collected will also support informed decision making processes, to reach out to communities generally characterized by increasing climatic variability of their environment, growing competition for land, rising population and decentralisation. Outcomes will address the second goal of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development calls: to end hunger, achieve food security and improved nutrition and promote sustainable agriculture.

Eligibility and requirements:

The student will based at QUB throughout the project but will be expected to travel to Africa, specifically Malawi and Uganda, and this could involve staying in basic accommodation in rural areas for up to three months per year. Costs of travel and subsistence and associated expenses (e.g. visas, vaccinations, insurance) will be covered. Previous experience in smallholder agriculture in tropical areas would be an advantage. The student will be expected to observe QUB and SHA standards and policies, including on safeguarding and security, and to follow risk assessments and instructions of SHA country directors at all times.

Academic eligibility:

Candidates should have (or expect to achieve) a minimum of a 2.1 Honours degree in a relevant subject (e.g. biological or veterinary science, geography or economics). Applicants with a 2.2 Honours degree may be considered provided they have or expect to achieve a Commendation or Distinction-level MSc in a relevant subject.

References:

Applicants must provide details of two academic referees in their application (neither of whom may be a supervisor of the project). Two satisfactory references must be received no later than 5 working days after the application deadline, or the application will not be considered.

Start date: 1 October 2020
Duration: 36 months

This project will be supervised by Professor Eric Morgan and Dr Martina Bozzola in the School of Biological Sciences at QUB. Additional guidance and mentorship will be provided by Paul Wagstaff, Senior Agriculture Advisor at Self-Help Africa.

Training:

The student will work closely with project partner Self-Help Africa (https://selfhelpafrica.org/uk/) and benefit from a high level of HEI-NGO integration, preparing them for research using mixed methods and applied work in development. Placements with SHA in the field and in their offices in Belfast and Dublin will provide additional experience in policy, nutrition and agriculture for overseas aid. The student will join an existing QUB-led Global Challenges Research Fund (GCRF) research project, running until at least 2022 and including HEI partners in the UK and Malawi (CoIs and PDRAs in animal health and nutrition, and socio-economics), which would fund the costs of field visits and data collection. Scientific training will include field and laboratory skills in parasitology, climate-based modelling of parasite transmission, experimental design and analysis. The student will also work to develop integration of the research with SHA projects in Malawi and pilot work in Uganda, most notably through farmer field schools, providing opportunities to build field experience and a wide range of transferable skills.

Further reading:

Bozzola M et al. 2018. Climate shocks, weather and maize intensification decisions in rural Kenya. Agricultural Adaptation to Climate Change in Africa: Food Security in a Changing Environment 107-128.

Cable J et al. 2017. Global change, parasite transmission and disease ecology: lessons from ecology. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 372, 1719, 20160088.

Rose H et al. 2015. GLOWORM-FL: A simulation model of the effects of climate and climate change on the free-living stages of gastro-intestinal nematode parasites of ruminants. Ecological Modelling 297, 232-245.

Walker JG et al. 2015. Mixed methods evaluation of targeted selective anthelmintic treatment by resource-poor smallholder farmers in Botswana. Veterinary Parasitology 214, 80-88.

Funding Information

This project is funded by Northern Ireland Department for the Economy, under its Collaborative Awards in Science and Technology (CAST) scheme, with Self-Help Africa as partner. The studentship provides for full tuition fees and maintenance stipend (£15,285 per annum).

Information on eligibility can be found here:

https://www.economy-ni.gov.uk/sites/default/files/publications/economy/post-graduate-studentships-terms-conditions-19-20.pdf

Project Summary
Supervisor

Professor Eric Morgan

More Information

askmhls@qub.ac.uk

Research Profile


Mode of Study

Full-time: 3 years


Funding Body
DfE
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