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Management of Social Behaviour of Domestic Yaks in Manang, Nepal: An Etho-Ethnographic Study

Herdsmen use different techniques, as per varying geographies and cultures, to keep the cohesion within herds and avoid animals getting lost or predated. However, there is no study on the social behaviour of yaks and herdsmen management practices. Therefore, this ethology study was initiated by ethn...

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Published in:Animals (Basel) 2023-01, Vol.13 (2), p.248
Main Authors: Johnson, Théophile, Pilleboue, Emma, Herbrich, Maxime, Garine, Eric, Sueur, Cédric
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description Herdsmen use different techniques, as per varying geographies and cultures, to keep the cohesion within herds and avoid animals getting lost or predated. However, there is no study on the social behaviour of yaks and herdsmen management practices. Therefore, this ethology study was initiated by ethnographic inquiries. In Manang, the success of the shepherd is dictated by his personal attribute of 'Khula man' or open-heartedness. This attribute refers to good intentions and emotions such as empathy, which allow the shepherd to focus more on others than on himself. This cultural way of assessing the skills required to become a successful and knowledgeable shepherd guided us to study the effect of cultural values on the herd's social behaviour. We collected data from two herds living at the same settlement (Yak kharka, 4100 m altitude, Nepal) by equipping them with loggers. One of the herdsmen used the tether rope while the other one did not. Moreover, the Thaku herd had a more proactive shepherd than the Phurba one. In each herd, 17 animals were equipped with one Actigraph wgt3x-BT to measure activity using an accelerometer and spatial associations using a proximity recorder. One of the herds was equipped with GPS (N = 11) as well. Using GPS locations and activity, we showed that the two herds were cohesive and synchronised their activities but the Thaku herd (tether rope herd) was more cohesive than the Phurba herd based on the Actigraph signals. The shepherds also have personal knowledge of the social relationships of individual animals in their herds and use these relationships to keep the group cohesive and to manage cattle well.
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subjects Accelerometers
Activity patterns
Animals
anthropozoology
biologging
Cattle
Climatic conditions
Cohesion
Cooperation
Cultural values
Dairy cattle
Ecology, environment
Environment and Society
Environmental Sciences
Ethnography
Ethology
Females
herd synchronisation
Herding
High altitude
Human influences
Humanities and Social Sciences
human–animal bond
Life Sciences
Males
Meat
Mothers
Pastures
Rope
Social Anthropology and ethnology
Social behavior
social network
Symbiosis
Tethers
Transportation applications
Wool
title Management of Social Behaviour of Domestic Yaks in Manang, Nepal: An Etho-Ethnographic Study
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