Mukota
The Mukota is an indigenous pig from Zimbabwe and neighboring southern African contexts, known as a small, hardy type adapted to low-input village systems. It is often dark-coated, active, and able to cope with heat and variable feed better than many imported commercial breeds. Mukota pigs usually grow more slowly and remain smaller than intensive pork lines, but their value lies in survival, reproduction, and usefulness where feed, housing, and veterinary resources may be limited.
Mukota management should not be confused with neglect. Good keepers still provide water, shade, secure night housing, parasite control, and supplementary feed when forage or household byproducts are not enough. Development projects and conservation herds value the breed because it can contribute resilience to local production. Breeders should keep the population distinct where possible, since crossing can increase market size while weakening the genetic resource that made the Mukota useful.
Colors: Belted, Black, Black and White, Blonde, Brown, Cream, Ginger, Ginger and Black, Pied, Red, Red and Black, Sandy, Solid Black, Solid White, Spotted, Swallow Belly, White