Bouda Vosough Ahmadi

Bouda Vosough Ahmadi
Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations | FAO · Animal Production and Health Division

PhD
Coordinator of the Global Secretariat of the GF-TADs at FAO

About

67
Publications
9,666
Reads
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619
Citations
Introduction
Veterinarian and agricultural economist specialized in policy analysis and socioeconomic impact assessment; animal disease prevention and control policies and animal welfare
Additional affiliations
January 2019 - present
Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations
Position
  • Economist
February 2016 - February 2017
European Commission
Position
  • Research Officer
February 2017 - December 2018
Scotland's Rural College
Position
  • Economist
Education
March 2003 - May 2007
Wageningen University & Research
Field of study
  • Agricultural Economics, Animal-Health Economics
September 2001 - January 2003
Wageningen University & Research
Field of study
  • Agricultural Economics and Management
September 1992 - July 1998
Islamic Azad University, Tehran
Field of study
  • Veterinary Medicine

Publications

Publications (67)
Article
Full-text available
Foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) is endemic in Iran and associated with a large impact on the livestock industry. Livestock mobility is recognized as one of the most important risk factors for FMD and other infectious livestock diseases’ introduction and dissemination. The description of temporal and spatial aspects of livestock mobility networks in Ir...
Preprint
Full-text available
Background: Backyard chicken farming is usually subsistence and predominates in low-income countries and, to a lesser extent, in middle-income countries. Chicken flocks are generally raised by households in a low-input, low-output system in contact with other flocks, livestock and wildlife. This low biosecurity setting predisposes chickens to disea...
Article
Full-text available
p style="line-height:150%"> Bovine tuberculosis (bTB) is a globally distributed zoonotic disease with significant economic impacts. Control measures in Great Britain include testing for and culling diseased animals. Farmers receive compensation for the value of culled animals, but not for the consequential costs of having to comply with testing and...
Article
Indirect costs of animal disease outbreaks often significantly exceed the direct costs. Despite their importance, indirect costs remain poorly characterised due to their complexity. In this study, we developed a framework to assess the indirect costs of a hypothetical African Swine Fever outbreak in Switzerland. We collected data through internatio...
Preprint
Full-text available
Indirect costs of animal disease outbreaks often significantly exceed the direct costs. Despite their importance, indirect costs remain poorly characterised due to their complexity. In this study, we developed a framework to assess the indirect costs of a hypothetical African Swine Fever outbreak in Switzerland. We collected data through internatio...
Article
Full-text available
Improved animal health can reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions intensity in livestock systems while increasing productivity. Integrated modelling of disease impacts on farm-scale emissions is important in identifying effective health strategies to reduce emissions. However, it requires that modellers understand the pathways linking animal health...
Preprint
Full-text available
Improved animal health can reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions intensity in livestock systems while increasing productivity. Integrated modelling of disease impacts on farm-scale emissions is important in identifying effective health strategies to reduce emissions. However, it requires that modellers understand the pathways linking animal health...
Article
Full-text available
Liver fluke infection (fascioliasis) is a parasitic disease which affects the health and welfare of ruminants. It is a concern for the livestock industry and is considered as a growing threat to the industry because changing climatic conditions are projected to be more favorable to increased frequency and intensity of liver fluke outbreaks. Recent...
Article
Full-text available
Biannual mass vaccination is a routinely applied foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) control strategy in Turkey. However, because biannual mass vaccination may leave significant immunity gaps, this strategy may cause economic losses because of possible FMD infections. In high-risk areas—such as border cities, it was suggested by the government to increase...
Chapter
This book contains 9 chapters that discuss some of the latest developments in economic research that are relevant to animal welfare and related policy development, including the evolution of animal welfare as a branch of animal science; animal welfare from an economic theory perspective; consumer demand and related quantitative methods such as will...
Article
Global population growth together with rising incomes is increasing the demand for meat-based products. This increases the need to optimize livestock production structures, whilst ensuring viable returns for the farmers. On a global scale, beef producers need tools to assist them to produce more high-quality products whilst maintaining economic eff...
Article
Full-text available
Farm Animal Genetic Resources (FAnGR) are threatened by breed homogenisation. Rare breeds may carry important genes that allow breeders to respond to global production challenges including climate change and emerging disease risk. Yet, exploration of approaches to improve cost-effectiveness of investments in farm animal genetic diversity has been l...
Article
Full-text available
Johne's disease is an endemic contagious bacterial infection of ruminants which is prevalent in the United Kingdom and elsewhere. It can lower financial returns on infected farms by reducing farm productivity through output losses and control expenditures. A farm-level analysis of the economics of the disease was conducted taking account of farm va...
Article
Full-text available
Ex situ collections offer the potential to reduce extinction risks, affording option to society in maintaining future breeding opportunities for productivity and heritage traits. However, how much should we be seeking to collect and conserve in gene banks, and where? We developed a mathematical model to optimize logistical decisions of breed conser...
Article
The UK’s Farm Animal Genetic Resources (FAnGR) make an important contribution to food security by ensuring greater adaptive capacity within the UK livestock sector to grand challenges including climate change and emerging diseases. Some 75% of the UK’s native breeds are now threatened with extinction so it is necessary to develop conservation progr...
Article
Full-text available
Animal diseases are global issues affecting the productivity and financial profitability of affected farms. Johne’s disease is distributed on farms worldwide and is an endemic contagious bacterial infection in ruminants caused by Mycobacterium avium subspecies paratuberculosis. In cattle, the clinical disease manifests itself as chronic enteritis r...
Technical Report
Full-text available
Executive Summary Changes in market prices and agricultural policy are predicted to have a major impact on the structure and resilience of the Scottish agricultural sector post-Brexit. However, uncertainty surrounding post-Brexit agriculture remains significant for the Scottish agricultural sector and therefore requires a detailed assessment of the...
Article
Full-text available
Impaired animal health causes both productivity and profitability losses on dairy farms, resulting in inefficient use of inputs and increase in greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions produced per unit of product (i.e. emissions intensity). Here, we used subclinical mastitis as an exemplar to benchmark alternative scenarios against an economic optimum and a...
Book
Farm level models have been widely used in agricultural economic studies. This book provides an in-depth description of different methodologies and techniques currently used in farm level modeling. While chapters will given an overview of the theoretical grounding behind the models, it will take an applied stance; more specifically using cases from...
Article
Full-text available
Climate change has the potential to impair livestock health, with consequences for animal welfare, productivity, greenhouse gas emissions, and human livelihoods and health. Modelling has an important role in assessing the impacts of climate change on livestock systems and the efficacy of potential adaptation strategies, to support decision making f...
Article
Full-text available
SUMMARY Management of beef suckler cattle herds requires a difficult but vitally important balance between farm profits, animal health and welfare and sustainable food production. A dynamic programming (DP) model was implemented to investigate the consequences of replacement and management decisions on the interactions and possible trade-offs betwe...
Article
Interest in models that integrate biophysical and economic components of agri-environmental systems has increased, largely in recognition of the multiple services provided by agri-environmental systems and reflecting the complexity of ‘multi-functional’ agriculture. We discuss the challenges of bio-economic modelling projects where biophysical and...
Article
Full-text available
To limit tail biting incidence, most pig producers in Europe tail dock their piglets. This is despite EU Council Directive 2008/120/EC banning routine tail docking and allowing it only as a last resort. The paper aims to understand what it takes to fulfil the intentions of the Directive by examining economic results of four management and housing s...
Article
With an increasing burden on public sector budgets, increased responsibility and cost sharing mechanisms for animal diseases are being considered. To achieve this, fiscal and non-fiscal intervention policies need to be designed such that they consistently promote positive disease risk management practices by animal keepers. This paper presents a re...
Technical Report
Full-text available
Key message: For Scottish dairy farms, the new CAP reforms will tend to reduce profitability and net margins. However, this is predicted to have little impact on output or structural change within the industry as other factors such as milk price are more important drivers of structural change.
Article
Full-text available
Impact of animal health on greenhouse gas emissions - Volume 6 Issue 1 - Ş. Özkan, B. V. Ahmadi, H. Bonesmo, O. Østerås, A. Stott, O. M. Harstad
Article
Full-text available
Sustainable intensification (SI) is a multifaceted concept incorporating the ambition to increase or maintain the current level of agricultural yields while reduce negative ecological and environmental impacts. Decision-support systems (DSS) that use integrated analytical methods are often used to support decision making processes in agriculture. H...
Article
The latest Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) reforms could bring substantial changes to Scottish farming communities. Two major components of this reform package, an introduction of environmental measures into the Pillar 1 payments and a move away from historical farm payments towards regionalized area payments, would have a significant effect on al...
Article
Full-text available
Structural equation modelling and survey data were used to test determinants' influence on farmers' intentions towards Escherichia coli O157 on-farm control. Results suggest that farmers more likely to show willingness to spend money/time or vaccinate to control Escherichia coli O157 are those: who think farmers are most responsible for control; wh...
Poster
Animal diseases are of economic concern, and economic aspects play an important role in public and private animal health related decision-making. Diseases may compromise production, food security and safety, and animal welfare. Control of diseases, however requires resource investments and incurred costs. Limited information is available on how eco...
Conference Paper
Full-text available
All rights reserved. Readers may make verbatim copies of this document for non-commercial purposes by any means, provided that this copyright notice appears on all such copies. Abstract The post 2015 Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) reforms may bring a substantial change in the way farm payments are paid in Scotland where earlier farm payments were...
Conference Paper
Full-text available
Sclerotinia rot is a disease caused by the fungus Sclerotinina sclerotiorum which affects a wide range of crops and causes major yield and economic losses. Crop rotation is an important strategy for minimising losses. A dynamic programming (DP) model was developed to study the trade-offs between state of the land, severity of sclerotinia and financ...
Article
DAIRY farmers need to make a real-time decision about immediate or delayed insemination once a cow is in oestrus. The biological and economic consequences of this decision for a given cow depend on both cow and herd characteristics with important implications in the short and long term. Even so, given the frequency and complexity of the decision an...
Article
Extensive sheep farming systems make an important contribution to socio-economic well-being and the 'ecosystem services' that flow from large areas of the UK and elsewhere. They are therefore subject to much policy intervention. However, the animal welfare implications of such interventions and their economic drivers are rarely considered. Under De...
Article
In many countries, including the UK, the majority of domestic sows are housed in farrowing crates during the farrowing and lactation periods. Such systems raise welfare problems due to the close confinement of the sow. Despite the fact that many alternative housing systems have been developed, no commercially viable/feasible option has emerged for...
Article
A bio-economic linear program based on data from 20 commercial extensive sheep farms was used to predict the effects on aspects of farm management of response to CAP reform in Great Britain. The objective function of the LP was to maximise gross margin while meeting ewe energy requirements from farm grown or purchased feeds on a monthly basis throu...
Article
Full-text available
This study quantified interactions between animal welfare and farm profitability in British extensive sheep farming systems. Qualitative welfare assessment methodology was used to assess welfare from the animal's perspective in 20 commercial extensive sheep farms and to estimate labour demand for welfare, based on the assessed welfare scores using...
Article
The viability of eradicating bovine viral diarrhoea (BVD) in Scottish suckler herds is dependent on the continued compliance with eradication schemes. At the farm level, the costs of BVD have been identified in previous studies and show a substantial financial imperative to avoid infection. At a regional level the incentives of BVD eradication to i...
Article
Full-text available
Since decoupling of the CAP, many Scottish suckler cow farms are facing financial difficulties. In response, many farmers are out-wintering extensively managed suckler cows to minimise production costs. These systems are of animal welfare concern. A range of trade-offs between animal welfare indicators and between animal welfare and farm profitabil...
Article
Data from each of 5 commercial, extensive sheep farms in Cumbria, UK were used as parameters in a linear program (LP) representing labour and grazing management in such farming systems. The LP maximised ewe enterprise gross margin subject to constraints dictated by the labour availability and land types on each farm. Under the assumptions used, lab...
Article
Full-text available
A transmission model developed to investigate the dynamics of Escherichia coli O157:H7 bacteria in a typical Dutch dairy herd was used to assess the effectiveness of vaccination, diet modification, probiotics (colicin) and hygienic measures as to water troughs and bedding, when they are applied single or in combination, in reducing the prevalence o...
Article
Full-text available
Beef is considered to be an important source of food-borne disorders caused by the bacteria Escherichia coli O157:H7 (VTEC O157). Through the beef-supply chain, this bacterium can pose a risk to public health. The objective of this research is to provide quantitative insight in the cost-effectiveness of interventions to control VTEC O157 at two lev...
Article
Beef contamination with Escherichia coli O157:H7 (VTEC) is an important food-safety issue. To investigate the effectiveness of interventions against VTEC in Dutch beef industrial slaughterhouses that slaughter 500 dairy cattle per day, a Monte Carlo simulation model was built. We examined seven carcass-antimicrobial interventions, namely: hot-water...
Article
The cost-effectiveness of seven decontamination measures to reduce Escherichia coli O157:H7 (VTEC)-contaminated carcass quarters in a typical Dutch dairy-beef industrial slaughterhouse were explored. To estimate the effectiveness a stochastic epidemiological-simulation model was used and to estimate the net cost a deterministic-economic model. The...

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