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Article
Project Alpaca
Rangelands (2001)
  • D. Layne Coppock, Utah State University
Abstract
Traditional alpaca production in the High Andes has depended on access to irrigated patches of rangeland called bofedales that offer green forage during dry periods. In 1993, Project Alpaca began a participatory program to improve the production and processing of alpaca wool, introducing a technical package that included fencing materials to help indigenous herders better conserve bofedal forage and improve alpaca nutrition. Our evaluation of the impacts of fencing revealed several consequences. Although households with access to fenced bofedales showed reduced rates of mortality for young alpaca, a proliferation of fencing quickly began to privatize what had been a common property resource...
Keywords
  • Project Alpaca
Publication Date
2001
Citation Information
Buttolph, L., and D.L. Coppock. 2005. Project alpaca. International Camelid Quarterly 4(1): 41-48.