In Africa, grasslands are the backbone of rural life. They feed cattle, goats, and sheep; support millions of pastoralists and farmers; and play a vital role in food security. But does the continent have grasslands in abundance? Not really.
New scientific research shows that Africa’s grasslands are being pushed beyond their limits and the pressure is growing.
Published in Nature Communications, the study finds that Africa’s grasslands can no longer keep up with the rapidly increasing number of livestock. While grass continues to grow in many regions, it is not growing fast enough to feed all the animals that depend on it. The result is widespread overgrazing, land degradation, and a growing threat to livelihoods.
Too many animals, not enough grass
The researchers analysed satellite data, climate records, and livestock numbers across the continent. Their conclusion is striking: “Nearly half of Africa’s grasslands are currently grazed beyond their sustainable capacity.”
The study has not been peer-reviewed.
The problem is most severe in North Africa and parts of East Africa, where livestock densities are high and grass growth is limited. In these regions, animals consume grass faster than it can regenerate. Over time, this leads to bare land, soil erosion, and declining productivity.
Surprisingly, the study found that livestock numbers–not climate change–are the biggest driver of grassland stress. While droughts and rainfall variability do affect grass growth, the rapid increase in cattle, goats, and sheep has had a much larger impact.
Africa’s livestock population has grown dramatically over the past decades as human populations have expanded and demand for meat and milk has risen. In many areas, traditional grazing systems that once worked well are now under strain.
An uneven continent
One of the most important findings of the study is that grassland pressure in Africa is unevenly distributed. While some regions are overstretched, others are underused.
Southern Africa, in particular, has large areas of grassland that are not fully utilised. These regions could support more livestock without damaging the land. However, livestock production remains concentrated in already stressed areas, creating an imbalance.
This uneven use means the problem is not simply a lack of grass across Africa but a lack of coordinated planning and management.
Why overgrazing matters
Overgrazing does more than reduce grass cover. It weakens soils, increases erosion, and reduces the land’s ability to absorb water. Over time, this can lead to desertification and the permanent loss of productive land.
“Continued increases in livestock numbers threaten the long-term productivity and resilience of African grasslands,” the authors write.
For pastoralist communities, the consequences are immediate and severe: fewer animals survive droughts, milk yields decline, and conflicts over grazing land become more common. For governments, degraded grasslands threaten food security and rural stability.
The study warns that if current trends continue, many grasslands may lose their ability to recover, locking communities into cycles of poverty and environmental decline.
What can be done?
The researchers argue that solutions already exist but they require political will and regional cooperation.
First, better livestock management is essential. This includes controlling herd sizes, improving grazing practices, and investing in animal productivity rather than simply increasing numbers.
Second, Africa needs better regional planning. Livestock production could be expanded in underused grassland areas while easing pressure in overstretched regions. This would require infrastructure, veterinary services, and policies that support mobility and trade.
Third, governments must treat grasslands as valuable ecosystems, not empty land. Protecting and restoring degraded grasslands should be part of national climate, agriculture, and development strategies.
VISUAL OF THE WEEK

Credit: Science Advances paper in research highlights below.
QUOTE OF THE WEEK
“Without coordinated global action to expand manufacturing, strengthen health systems, and build community trust, malaria vaccines may fall short of their potential to eliminate the disease in Africa,” Rotimi J. Ojo, et al, Science Direct.
RESEARCH HIGHLIGHTS
Africa’s Oldest Cremation Discovered in Malawi: A new study has revealed the earliest known evidence of intentional human cremation in Africa, dating back about 9,500 years. Archaeologists found the remains of a cremated adult at the Hora 1 rock shelter in northern Malawi. The body was burned on a carefully constructed open-air pyre, requiring sustained high heat and significant communal effort.
Evidence shows the body was deliberately prepared, burned, and later revisited, suggesting complex funerary rituals. Until now, cremation in Africa was thought to have begun thousands of years later with farming societies. This discovery challenges long-held assumptions, revealing that hunter-gatherer communities practiced sophisticated social and ritual traditions, including memorialising the dead and repeatedly using sacred landscape sites long before agriculture emerged. [Reference, Science Advances]
Infectious Diseases and Their Heavy Financial Impact in West Africa: infectious diseases like malaria, tuberculosis, cholera, and Lassa fever place a very heavy financial burden on families and governments in West Africa. People not only pay for hospital care and medicine, but also lose income when they are sick or caring for others. In some countries, malaria alone causes major losses to the national economy.
The study found that many households struggle to afford treatment, which can worsen illness and spread disease. By using insurance-style (actuarial) methods, the researchers showed that better planning can help predict future health costs and reduce financial shocks. The paper recommends stronger health insurance, better prevention, improved sanitation, and smarter budgeting to reduce disease costs and protect livelihoods across West Africa. [Reference, Health Science Reports]
Digital Tools and AI Are Transforming HIV Prevention in Africa: as HIV prevention budgets shrink and gaps in care persist, a new study shows that digital health and artificial intelligence (AI) are becoming powerful tools in Africa’s fight against HIV. Mobile phones, SMS services, apps, chatbots, and telehealth platforms are helping people access HIV testing, prevention drugs like PrEP, and counselling—often privately and without stigma. AI is enabling health systems to better predict HIV risk, target high-risk areas, improve supply chains, and reduce paperwork for health workers. Countries such as Kenya, Rwanda, Ghana, Nigeria, and South Africa are already seeing results.
However, challenges remain, including poor internet access, low digital literacy, weak system integration, and data privacy concerns. The study concludes that with strong leadership, community involvement, and sustained investment, digital health and AI could significantly expand access, improve equity, and strengthen HIV prevention across Africa. [Reference, The Lancet Global Health]
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