Agribusiness, Agriculture, Veterinary Medicine, Cassava, Garri, food security, Agritech and the Red Meat Value Chain.
Tuesday, August 8, 2023
ANTHRAX IN PIGS.
Step up biosecurity on your pig farms.Report any case of sudden deaths and remember do not touch carcass . Disinfect farms and use foot baths.
Friday, March 18, 2022
Lockdown mode urged with avian flu outbreaks in Mississippi and Central Flyways.
A warning to tighten up biosecurity and reduce movement in and out of poultry houses was issued by Terry Conger, DVM, poultry health epidemiologist with USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS). The warning came as outbreaks of highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) occurred along the Mississippi Flyway for migratory waterfowl. Earlier HPAI outbreaks were reported along the Atlantic Flyway, which can mingle with the Mississippi Flyway.
Thursday, March 17, 2022
Model predicts cross-species contamination risk for farm animals.
A new mathematical model from US researchers reveals the high risk of cross-species disease spread on farms with more than one type of animal. According to the model developed by a team at North Carolina State University—and described in Veterinary Research—biosecurity efforts focused on the top three per cent of farms in a particular contact network may significantly cut back cross-species disease dissemination.
Saturday, February 19, 2022
How sneezing hamsters sparked a COVID outbreak in Hong Kong.
Pet hamsters probably carried the Delta variant of SARS-CoV-2 into Hong Kong and sparked a human COVID-19 outbreak, according to a genomic analysis of viral samples from the rodents.
Friday, October 8, 2021
Agribusiness :How to use circular economy to boost productivity in dairy value chain.
The circular economy is a
new approach to the reduce-reuse-recycle model.
The circular economy has
the added advantage of not only making products or by-products go back to
production cycles it ensures sustainability of business and environment.
What is the circular economy and how can this
be implemented in the dairy value chain?.
Circular economy is a model of production
/consumption that involves the use, reuse and recycling of products, byproducts
and materials of production to create a sustainable cycle of production and
consumption.
Dairy industry is based on
circular production cycles with the dairy and Agri-food sector sharing a
history that dates back to early dairy business.
The use of pasture land
for feeding dairy cows, by growing different crops on rotated pieces of land,
by fertilizing the land with animal’s waste and at the same time keeping
animals as a long-term stock of nutrients, the sector builds on the long and deep
knowledge of humankind.
Dairy cows have a unique
ability to consume non-edible feed stocks and turn them into a very nutritious
protein that humans can eat.
The concept of the circular economy is to look
at the cycle of production and identify points or areas in the cycle that can
be redirected into the production phase to achieve the following:
1)
Reduce waste and
the resultant pressure on the environment by creating clean alternatives.
2) Reduce cost of production by reusing some inputs or
by-products thus increasing profit margin.
3) Create new channels of production by creating new
viable products from existing products.
In the dairy industry the circular economy is employed in the following ways:
1)
The waste from
cows provides a source of fertilizer that can be put back into the farm, it is
also fed into bio digester thus helping to curb methane emissions and produce a
renewable energy source for the farm.
2)
Cows utilize the
grazing lands as well providing a source
of milk and natural fertilizer, and at the end of life the cow can be converted
into a variety of products, such as beef, pet food, and leather goods
3)
Whey, a co-product
of the cheese-making process was once put onto land, or fed to pigs, but is now
being used as high-value protein concentrates for specific human nutrition
(sports, infants, and the elderly) in a growing market, and in special cases,
for young animal feed.
4)
Nutrient
recycling from waste water treatment plants sludge from dairy processing:
digestate (sludge output from a digester) e.g. from digesting manure or food
waste is of outmost importance for a circular economy to function properly
(whilst guaranteeing and safeguarding food safety and animal health).
5)
Waste to
electricity: using the biogas from the digester to produce electricity. The
heat will be redirected to the stalls to keep the facility warm, thus also
increasing productivity at reduced cost.
6)
Cow mats produced
from hide also boosts productivity by increasing the comfort of the animals
thus stimulating more milk production.
Wednesday, March 24, 2021
Cassava exports, prices jump on surging china demands.
Vietnam exported $256 million worth of cassava and cassava products in the first two months of the year, a 77.9 percent year-on-year increase, with China being the biggest market.
Thursday, August 13, 2020
Covid-19 and African swine fever(ASF)..
A different virus has taken over the headlines now ,sharing the spotlight with African Swine Fever dominating the columns online and in the paper, the Corona virus disease 2019 (Covid-19).
The Corona virus does not affect swine but indirectly affects the swine business. There is one major difference between ASF and Covid-19, this is the fact that ASF leads to the death of virtually all pigs whereas Covid-19 would in most cases not be lethal, meaning that proper health care can play a role as well.
Learn all you need to know about ASF from experts. Join us.
Lessons learnt with regard to Covid-19 and ASF, lessons learnt are threefold.
First, it’s never too early to start thinking about a virus at the other side of the planet (look at this Danish example).
Secondly, let’s hope the millions pumped into the vaccine business to find a good Covid-19 vaccine somehow lead to a positive spin-off for pig vaccine development too.
Thirdly, countries reporting many outbreaks are not the ones having the largest problem – they in fact are the ones sharing the most information.
The striking similarities between Covid-19 and ASF. 1) The sudden panic . 2) The absence of a vaccine now. 3) Reporting of outbreaks.
Reporting the outbreaks is very important as there is a link between countries reporting and number of cases in such countries.
There are many websites around the world keeping us posted about the progress of the Covid-19 virus, about the number of people infected, the number of people that died of the virus and mortality percentages, showing interesting maps.
Interestingly, however concrete those numbers appear to be, it’s good to ask questions about the ‘why’ and ‘how’ behind those figures and that there is a parallel with African Swine Fever outbreaks which Pig Progress has been following intensively.
For example – can people be infected with Covid-19 yet barely notice it? If so, that would mean that the virus could be much more widespread than is actually reported, meaning that the real mortality figure is much lower.
Extremely interesting in this context I find is the way in which authorities have behaved in recent years with the reporting of ASF outbreaks.
It is important to understand that accurately reporting ASF outbreaks depends on a gigantic mix of components, just to name a few: 1)Availability of test kits.
2)Presence of necessary diagnostics infrastructure, including labs.
3)Availability of funding for affected farmers.
4)Availability of educated manpower to process all information.
5)Knowledge about the virus.
6)Sense of responsibility for others.
7)Cultural attitudes with regard to transparency in case of large problems.
8)Corruption.
9)Protection of export interests.
As regard to ASF, some countries have reported more outbreaks than others, in different frequencies, in different intensity, on different levels as well. Some did not report anything at all – or only occasional outbreaks.
Using the history of reporting , to have a reliable idea as to what numbers might be credible beyond doubt with regard to reporting corona virus, I’d first look at the countries that have been reporting ASF frequently, swiftly and without hesitation.
Adopted from pig progress.
Friday, July 31, 2020
Pig producers considers stopping castration.
10 pig producers’ organisations in Western France are considering to stop castrating piglets as from December 31, 2021.
The organisations represent a respectable part of the country’s producers. The proposal of the 10 organisations is a reaction to a decision by Didier Guillaume, France’s minister for agriculture and food.His aim is to improve animal welfare in France’s pig industry and one of his measures is that, after 2021, castration will only be allowed when anesthetics are applied.
The intention is that the basis price for pigs will be adjusted. The collectives feel that gilts as well as entire boars will form the reference for pig prices as from 2021.
The slaughterhouses will become the place for checks whether or not carcasses will have boar taint, these could be detected by sniffing at the slaughter line by humans. Additional costs of these checks will be carried jointly by the pig farms that stopped castrating.
Saturday, July 4, 2020
Medium-chain fatty acids: Protecting pigs from pathogens.
Feed and feed ingredients have the potential to harbor devastating bacteria and viruses like porcine epidemic diarrhea (PED) virus, porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome (PRRS) and African swine fever (ASF).
The bacteria and viruses can be transmitted in feed – eventually making their way through the pig’s digestive system and replicating, causing infection.
The global movement of feed ingredients and commodities increases the risk of introducing disease through ingredients when sourced from areas of active disease pressures.
The risk of global disease transmission reinforces the need for an in-feed mitigation strategy to help guard against disease threats.
Medium-chain fatty acids (MCFAs) have proven to be a useful biosecurity tool, essentially acting as security guards to protect pigs from bacteria and viruses.
The coconut oil contains a (medium chain fatty acid}begin working in feed, before pigs consume it, to reduce the feed’s pathogen load. After feed consumption, it continues to work inside the animal to weaken pathogens in the digestive tract. Learn how coconut oil in your pig diet can act as a biosecurity tool .
The coconut oil kills bacteria in feed before the pig consumes it and also prevents the replication of bacteria inside the pig.
This is how it kills bacteria:1)Degrade the bacterial cell membrane.
2)Dissociate into the bacterial cell, causing the pH inside the cell to drop.
3)Block DNA replication of bacterial cells. In case of viruses with envelopes this is how coconut oil protects the pigs.
Wednesday, May 27, 2020
"African Swine Fever is a man-made disease".
Dr Klaus Depner, head of the International Animal Health Team at the Friedrich-Loeffler-Institut (FLI) on the island Riems in northern Germany, has to admit that even he as expert needed some time to understand the disease. How does the virus spread?Wild boars shed the virus mainly when they are very sick and in the final stage of the disease.
When the animals have high fever it’s in their character to stay where they are, and they are certainly not going to walk very far when they feel bad. So what we have here is a virus that is very stable in its environment without fast movement. It neither dies out, nor moves. Undisposed carcasses of infected wild boars remain infectious for a long time in the environment and become a source of infection for healthy animals.
The human role Still, ASF did spread from the Caucasus until the Baltics and Poland. The question now is how. Soft ticks and insects are unlikely to have transmitted the virus, the scientists say. In fact, they have little doubt identifying about the real reason behind most of the ASF outbreaks: negligence.
Participating in recent ASF monitoring missions in Eastern Europe, Depner has a good idea of what has likely occurred. He says, “Often it was a matter of human misbehaviour. What happened is that infected meat made it to the market.
When many pigs started to die, they were sent to slaughter. Pig prices dropped, cheap meat entered the market and the meat made its way into homes – and into suitcases. This is how the virus dispersed. The virus spread along the main roads, the transport routes. This spread bears a 100% human mark.” more.
Friday, April 17, 2020
VETERINARY MEDICINE:Poultry, pigs not susceptible to COVID-19.
Wednesday, January 30, 2019
How to protect a pig farm from African Swine Fever.(ASF).
ASF is all about contact ASF is spread by contact. Far less by the pig breathing the virus in as in Classical Swine Fever, so it should be easier to prevent and control.
Think ‘contact’ in everything you plan to do and subsequently carry out on the premises. The contact is not just pig to pig, but what we humans do by allowing the ASF virus in through contact on the clothing equipment, vehicles, food deliveries, breeding stock and every other visit by an ‘outsider’ to or into your vulnerable farm premises.
1) Keep everybody off your farm You will need discipline and tact to do this effectively. Quite brutally, you do not know where they have been! So do not risk it. The only permissible person as routine is the pig veterinarian and of all people he should take the necessary precautions.
Even so, do not allow his vehicle on to the farm. Have a parking spot outside the perimeter and if necessary, help carry his equipment in for him.
There will be skilled artisans of course, electricity, roofing, plumbing, etc. who will need access. Keep their vehicles off the farm too and make it clear beforehand (for the sake of good relations) that they will have to use farm overalls and footwear and need their equipment mist-sprayed.
2)An unbreakable farm perimeter defense. For the delivery of replacement stock (semen is safer than live pigs) and the collection of finished pigs, have designated areas on or just outside the farm perimeter.
On no account allow ‘helpful’ drivers (offering to assist with the loading) on to the premises. The same with bulk or bagged food and supplies.
As soon as you can, set up food reception bulk bins using your own inlet hoses, not theirs; a covered site for bags and other bulky deliveries. All 3 on the farm boundary, for later inward transmission by your own staff, never theirs.
AGRIBUSINESS: 4 piglet parameters for lifetime performance.
Genetic selection is leading to larger litters of piglets born with lowered levels of physiological maturity. As this trend amplifies an evolutionary strategy in swine favouring survival of the fittest, it presents negative performance and animal welfare implications.
Sow Peripartal Syndrome is a complex web of interactions affecting sows and piglets during the peripartal period. At least four parameters are present at birth that can ultimately determine piglets’ lifetime performance.
The following is an update on research underway to managing the syndrome. Alive at birth While genetic selection has increased the total number of pigs per litter, the number of pigs born alive has not increased at the same pace.
AGRIBUSINESS: Heat stress in pigs and its effect on the gut.
Heat Stress is a physiological response to high environmental temperatures, where the animal is out of its thermo-neutral zone and can no longer effectively regulate its body temperature. Consequently, animal health, well-being and performance are negatively affected.
Sunday, January 20, 2019
VETERINARY MEDICINE: Dogs can be a potential risk for future influenza pandemic.
Wednesday, November 21, 2018
AgriProtein, a startup produce maggots from waste to feed animals.
A growing population, scarce water and land resources, and declining natural fish stocks make this more critical than ever.
Industrial farming of chickens, pigs and fish relies on protein from two sources: land-based grains and marine captured fish meal.
Agricultural protein requires vast amounts of land and water, while the sea-caught alternative has material consequences for marine life. Increased global food demand and environmental limits have caused prices of both protein sources to soar in recent years.
AgriProtein ,a startup grows maggots from waste to feed animals. AgriProtein is leading a new industry called nutrient recycling.
It is a business that grows maggots from waste collected from markets,farms, households and businesses. The maggots are processed into a highly nutritious protein supplement that substitutes fish meal in animal feed.
Using fly larvae fed on existing organic waste, AgriProtein has developed and tested a new large scale and sustainable source of natural protein.
The bio-conversion process takes organic waste streams from food factories, supermarkets, farms and restaurants, and recycles these into valuable products: an insect based complete protein – MagMeal™, an extracted fat – MagOil™ and a rich residual soil conditioner – MagSoil™. Agriprotein.
Friday, July 20, 2018
Cows and pigs are great livestock, but they can also make you really sick
Bacteria carried by unneutered dogs could put pregnant women at risk.
Tuesday, July 10, 2018
'Green'-feed: Industrial microbes could feed cattle, pigs, chicken.
Monday, July 9, 2018
How to detect foot and mouth disease with simple environmental sampling.
Agribusiness ideas.
Popular Posts
-
How Ngirumugenga rose from a 'small' farmer to a millionaire. Farming is a lucrative venture that ensures good returns on investm...
-
Taking time to walk the pens, make eye contact with each pig and pull the sick ones for individual care seems to conflict with the basic ...
-
Israeli gov't to fund medical cannabis research. The Ministries of Agriculture and Health will provide NIS 8 million in funding for 1...
-
Human hookworm infection exerts high health and economic burden. A new study suggests that the health and economic burden of hookworm infe...
-
Social capital is a means of bridging the gulf between people,places and events. Social media is a means of building social capital by prov...
-
Brain wiring quiets the voice inside your head. During a normal conversation, your brain is constantly adjusting the volume to soften the ...
AGRIBUSINESS EDUCATION.
Translate
I-CONNECT -AGRICULTURE
AGRIBUSINESS TIPS.
AGRIBUSINESS.
The Agriculture Daily
veterinarymedicineechbeebolanle-ojuri.blogspot.com Cassava: benefits of garri as a fermented food. Cassava processing involves fermentation which is a plus for gut health. The fermentation process removes the cyanogenic glucosides present in the fres...