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The Importance of Information Management and Genomics
AARD Worshop
Lakeland College February 11, 2015
Tom Lynch-Staunton Livestock Gentec, University of Alberta
Livestock Gentec • Formerly the Alberta Bovine Genomics Program • Expand to include Dairy and Pork • An Alberta Innovates BioSolutions centre that was
created to § capitalize on world-class genomics research
occurring at the University of Alberta and across Canada § bring the commercial benefits of genomics to the
Canadian livestock industry
A Collaborative Effort
What are our goals? • Improve Production Efficiency (reduce environmental impact) • Improve Quality (marbling, tenderness, nutrition) • Improve animal health and well-being • Food Safety and Traceability • COLLABORATION
What can we be the best in the world at? To produce healthy and content livestock that have minimal or beneficial impacts to the environment, while minimizing costs and maximizing consumer attributes and perceptions. Choosing which animals to breed affects the entire value chain. So we better choose the right ones.
What is the optimal cow?
Depends on Information Management
The best traits pass to the next generation
Genetic Improvement • How do we currently improve our cow herd?
1. Buying breeding animals with traits we like 2. Management and Culling Practices 3. Cross breeding and breed “observations”
4. By measuring phenotypes (BW, WW, etc) to build accurate EPD’s or performance records, and select replacements with desired traits
• Selection is more efficient than culling
What is Genomics? • The study of an organism’s
DNA sequence (genome): genes and variation in DNA sequence
• To be able to select bulls and replacement heifers with greater confidence
• Requires genomic tools but also phenotypic data…..
• In its infancy!
• “As easy as ACGT”- the 4 letters of the genetic code. Everyone has a DNA code which determines what you look like, good at sports etc. animal 1 A C G T A C G T animal 2 A C G C A C G T
• this difference is a Single Nucleotide Polymorphism or “SNP Marker”
Genomics, DNA, and Markers
Today is the age of Genomics
What can Genomics do now? 1. Create predictors for hard to measure traits like RFI 2. Increase accuracies of EPD’s through parentage 3. Identify which bulls are working 4. Now have “genomically enhanced EPD’s” available
in some breeds/ populations 5. Identify Genetic Defects or “problems” 6. Horned/polled test
Selection • Without measuring and tracking traits over time, how
would we ever know which is our best cow?
Continual Improvement • Production Efficiency: 1977 vs. 2007 Same amount of
beef now requires § 70% of the animals
§ 81% of the feed
§ 88% of the water
§ 67% of the land
§ Resulting in a 16% decrease in the carbon footprint of
beef
(Capper 2011, Animal Frontiers)
NOT DUE TO Genetic improvement
Feed Savings over 1 year: 5.47kg as fed/day or 1997kg as fed/year difference between low and high RFI cows. At $90/tonne, this amounts to approximately $81.55/ head savings (no effects on fertility and carcass traits)
LOW RFI cow J1042 (5 yr-old Hereford-Angus cow in the spring of 2004; RFI adj = -2.64 kg as fed/day; 2003 weight at weaning =787 kg).
HIGH RFI cow E1245 (8 yr-old Hereford-Angus cow in the spring of 2004; RFI adj = 2.83 kg as fed/day; 2003 weight at weaning = 755 kg).
What if?
Source: Basarab, Lacombe research station
Cost Benefit of Genetic Improvement • Value of genetic gain in the Canadian Beef
Industry: $3.90 profit/ cow mated / year (selecting bulls on BW, WW, PWG)
• This is cumulative meaning in 10 years, your cows are worth $39/cow more than day 1.
• This can increase to $6.58 when including feedlot and packer traits (RFI, ADG, Carcass)
• With increases in accuracy up to $9.43 with genomics
• Who Benefits depends on when you sell and information flow
•Total Gross Revenue derived from male offspring ranged from $4881 to $55,889 due to differences in sire prolificacy (Van Eenennaam, 2010) •Identifying “weird” occurances on the ranch Most Importantly, EPD’s can be developed by identifying relatives.
Value of Parentage
Value of DNA Profiles
•ACC= 1-√(1−r2) So the Igenity test would increase accuracy of BW EPD by 12% in an Angus purebred bull
Economic Questions
Value of using DNA test for bull selection for seedstock? • Intermediate accuracy (25%), commercial sire value
$340 • Direct value back to the producer would be ~ $170 • Stud sire, genetic improvement was predicted at $506 • Additional research; producers willing to buy bulls with
information and accurate EPDs at ~AUD $56/bull
Source: Van Eenennaam NBCEC, 2012
Challenge What do our customers want and how
do we provide it?
How do you make a decision?
Importance of Information 1. The importance of using EPD’s for selection 2. The importance of selection indexes 3. The value of a breeding animal with information 4. The importance of sharing information throughout
the value chain (BIXS) for gains in carcass quality or feedlot traits
5. The importance of using technology (smart phones, data management software, etc)
As producers, we can tend to forget about how important the numbers are, or focus in the short term: “Well I didn’t notice any changes”
1. Buy a data management software system 2. Create performance records on your cows 3. Sort your best and worst cows based on the
records (best-maternal, worst-terminal) 4. Select replacement heifers from your best cows 5. Buy Bulls with as Accurate EPD’s as possible using a
selection index (maternal or terminal) Make sure the good looking bull is also the best bull- Look at the data first
6. Use of Genomics (parentage, heifer DNA profiles, EPD’s, and selection indexes)
7. BE Patient
What To Do on the Ranch?
When is the best time to plant a tree?
Fear of Technology, Change, and information overload
• “The contribution to the business of an individual producer is very much a consequence of how they behave in the sense of sourcing bulls – the key decision for a producer is choosing their bull breeder as this determines their own rate of genetic progress.”- Dr. Peter Fennessey, Abacus Bio Ltd., New Zealand
Questions?
Livestock Gentec 1400 College Plaza 8215 112 Street Edmonton AB T6G 2C8
:www.livestockgentec.com :lynchsta@ualberta.ca
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