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Sheep Working Group Update

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Sheep Working Group Update June 2006 August 2006 Species Working Group (SWG) Formed as a result of 2004 USAHA meeting Charge: To provide species-specific input into ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Sheep Working Group Update


1
Sheep Working Group Update
  • June 2006

August 2006
2
Species Working Group (SWG)
  • Formed as a result of 2004 USAHA meeting
  • Charge To provide species-specific input into
    USAIP/NAIS
  • Broad industry-wide representation
  • Actively considering your grassroots realities
    and representing YOU!
  • Wrestled with many topics, consensus re build
    on existing scrapie program, G/L ID, costs, cuss
    and discuss

3
Recommendations made by SWG in 2004 regarding NAIS
  • Continue with the existing mandatory ID
    requirements of the National Scrapie Eradication
    Program
  • Evolve from this program rather than starting
    over is key for producer participation.
  • Most complete federal ID system in existence for
    any species.
  • Recognize no purely visual ID system will achieve
    final tracking goal (48 hours).
  • BUT no proven Electronic ID tracking system for
    sheep yet exists in the world.

4
Stats-USDA Scrapie Flock Numbers
  • 114,907 sheep and goat premises have flock/herd
    numbers in the SNGB as of 6/30/06. Approx. 67,000
    are sheep.
  • Official eartags have been issued to 84,154 s/g
    premises.
  • Market tagging capability encourages compliance.
  • Recommendation tie current Scrapie Flock ID
    (SFID) number to NAIS PIN in computer database(s)
    only.

5
Current Voluntary and Mandatory Scrapie ID
programs
  • ?These are ID programs and ?They provide flock of
    origin data on the tag.
  • ?They are NOT perfect sheep or goat movement
    tracking systems but they are valuable. 
  • ?These programs provide much more useful trace
    back data than exists for cattle not located in
    brand states and not monitored via private ID
    systems.

6
SFID Animal ID Unique individual number
  • MN38418 5425
  • Tested choices

7
History of Scrapie Mandatory ID
8
NAIS Movement Reporting (recommendations cont.)
  • Individual ID and movement recording mandated
    only when sheep commingle,
  • move in commerce
  • exhibited intra- and interstate
  • Sale of breeding stock and cull sheep
  • Group ID lambs in feeding channels
  • Group ID sheep moving intra and interstate for
    management purposes w/o change of ownership
  • (green indicates proposed NAIS changes)

9
Tracking reported when.
  • ?change of ownership,
  • ?interstate movement,
  • ?multiple owners commingling their animals

10
NAIS Recommendations
  • The sheep industry recognizes that exhibitions
    are currently a high-risk activity for disease
    transmission. Such events should immediately
    begin enforcing compliance regarding ID and
    tracking (health certificates).

11
Recommendations to NAIS staff and State
Veterinarians by SWG in Fall 2005
  • Todays scrapie program w/appropriate group/lot
    identification will work
  • The Scrapie Programs Flock ID number plus the
    animal ID number, as currently used in the NSEP,
    is a unique number in the US
  • Our industry has more premises and animals
    identified than others (114,907 sheep and goat
    premises as of 7/06)

12
NSEP overlap with NAIS
  • Continue with current scrapie numbering system -
    on all tags for sheep and goats inclusive of RFID
    tags. Numbering changes when NAIS becomes
    mandatory.

13
NAIS Tag numbering system
  • The 840 numbering system is a 15-digit numbering
    system providing unique individual animal
    identification
  • Designed solely for electronic reading.
  • Potentially makes visual reading of scrapie tags
    more error prone
  • SWG opposes this change mandated by NAIS
    standards from official visual sheep ID at this
    time.

14
NAIS AIN 15 digits intended for electronic
reading only
15
Search for perfect RFID tag retention, low
reactivity, ease of application, functional life
16
Recommendations (cont.)
  • Once electronic identification and tracking
    technology is proven to work in the sheep
    industry, it must also be economically feasible
    for industry.
  • Electronic ID has proven merit for disease
    control programs.

17
Range and Feeders
  • It is imperative that the range flock and feeder
    segments of the industry be able to move animals
    via group-lot format.
  • To tag or read individual animals in conditions
    common in these segments are such that it will be
    very difficult and costly to do so. Compliance
    will be poor, thus negatively affecting program
    strength.

18
Group/Lot ID
  • 15-character GIN
  • NAIS Premises alphanumeric ID (7)
  • Date (MMDDYY)
  • Lot assembled that day (01)

Number generated reported by producer
19
GIN application
  • Multiple shipments from the same premises on same
    day
  • A23456701260601
  • A23456701260602
  • Tracing backwards or forwards would involve ALL
    groups from the same premises.

20
Feeding Channels
  • Once a group enters feeding channels, normal
    practices and records will keep track of the
    group to the extent practical.
  • When animals leave the feeding facility they get
    a new GIN.
  • This approach is scientifically sound for sheep.

21
Auction markets, slaughter plants, feedlots
  • Auction markets, slaughter plants, feedlots can
    not rely upon EID reading systems that read lt
    100 of the animals at speed of commerce.
  • All systems presently fail this test. Therefore
    the current system of counting/accounting must be
    maintained - forcing the EID system to be an
    expensive time-consuming add-on to a situation in
    which throughput is critical.

22
Requested USDA conduct an economic analysis of
cost-benefit of EID methods and tracking for the
sheep industry.
  • A cost/benefit analysis needed for risk posed by
    the sheep industry in the event of a disease
    outbreak.
  • The only likely disease that would be addressed
    by a national sheep/goat tracking system is foot
    and mouth disease.
  • Industry considers the information from this
    proposed analysis to be valuable but nothing has
    been initiated.

23
The Real Challenges
Challenges.
  • Producers continually question the need for
    national ID program relative to the cost of
    administering and participating.
  • Will the NAIS really shorten the time that farms,
    etc. are quarantined if a FAD is diagnosed?
  • Sheep specific
  • as sheep are not small cows!
  • Will the benefits of NAIS offset the costs
  • Will NAIS be effective and truly limit quarantine
    time/economic losses for animal health events
  • Will species specificity be built in to NAIS as
    sheep are not small cows

24
Prediction on Mandatory Scrapie ID
  • Do we need a transition plan from NSEP to NAIS?
  • Assumption electronic ID tracking will become
    cheap and functional (cell phone based)
  • Answer - Scrapie eradication will benefit from
    individual tracking of breeding ewes. Industry
    will need a functional marriage of electronic
    devices with farm useful ID.
  • When necessary it shouldnt be painful to change
    from scrapie flock ID number to NAIS PIN.
  • Continue with the scrapie numbering system - on
    all tags for sheep and goats inclusive of RFID
    tags.

25
Where oh where has my little lamb gone
Thanks to the Sheep Working Group!
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