Establishment of a cashmere goat breeding scheme in Baft, Iran
Transcription
Establishment of a cashmere goat breeding scheme in Baft, Iran
Project Steering Committee Meeting Improving Livelihoods of Small Farmers and Rural Women through Value--Added Processing and Export of Cashmere, Wool and Mohair Value "Establishment bl h off a cashmere h goat breeding g scheme in Baft Baft,, Iran" Joaquín Mueller National Institute for Agricultural Technology Patagonia, Argentina 4 October 2011 2011, Dushanbe Dushanbe, Tajikistan Option 1 for genetic improvement Ge enetic c meriit Intervention Selection Random mating No selection Random mating 1. Retain male progeny from best females 2. Castrate other males 3. Select amongst retained males Time / generations Option 2 for genetic improvement Ge enetic c meriit Intervention Selection Structured mating Nucleus Base No selection Random mating 1. Mate best females with best males in a nucleus 2. Retain and select male p progeny g y of nucleus 3. Castrate other males Time / generations Advantages and disadvantages Option O ti 11: • Easy to implement in small flocks • Requires involvement of all farmers and animals Option 2: • Higher Hi h genetic n tic p progress ss • Requires management of a nucleus For any y breeding g program p g m The challenges The essentials • Implementation • Farmer involvement • Sustainability • Local extension support • Initial financial support • Out-scaling g • Technical advice Background information • Baft breeding station experience • Production system survey (Oct 2009): – Understand the nomad system – Identify target animal population – Identify target nomad farmers • Fiber quality analyses (Apr 2010): – Identify strengths and weaknesses of Baft cashmere – Determine variability and distribution of key traits Implementation of Baft cashmere breeding system • Initial breeding aim: – Higher quality cashmere suitable for small scale processing and for achieving higher prices for raw fiber • B Breeding din pl plan n options pti ns dis discussed: ss d: – With officials and professionals – With nomad farmers At Kerman Dept Agric At AI Station At CashmereFestival At Breeding Station Formally Informally With nomads and with shepherds Initially proposed system a. N l Nucleus (no--castration) (no b. Base 1 buck 20+1 20+1 best 40 females Breeding station best local buck 300-400 (castration) Nomad family flock a. Replacement of worse buck in nucleus on progeny test with nucleus born male b R b. Replacement pl m t of f old ld nucleus females with young nucleus or base f females l Selection criteria of participants • • • • • • • Interest y Location and accessibility Quality of cashmere Accept ear tagging of 40 best females Accept separate mating of nucleus Accept ear tag of progeny p fleece sampling p g Accept 8 participants and nomad guide Selected nomad farmers Further discussion on separate F p mating m g of nucleus and base females • Option 1: Artificial insemination (0) pr u n efficiency ff n y / AI costs – Reproduction • Option 2: Separate grazing (3) – Extra labor • Option p 3: Pen mating g (5) ( ) – Fence costs Nucleus management g calendar • Mar/Apr p 2010: Selection of foundation animals (visual) ( ) • J Jun/Jul J 2010: First m mating g • Nov/Dec 2010: 2010 First kidding • Jan/Feb 2011: Fleece sampling of male candidates • Apr/May 2011: Selection of replacements (index+vis.) (index+vis ) • Jun/Jul 2011: Second mating First round of buck replacement: p introducing a concept Selection of buck replacement aided by fleece analyses of 10 males /age group /flock Fleece analyses: Mean fiber diameter and down yield Index: Sum of standardized deviations from age group means (1.2 mic = 14.9%) Farmer selects “best” buck among top 3 indexed as replacement Example for Mahmood Ghassemi’s 10 young male candidates: Visual acceptability Tag 1304 1308 1306 1305 1309 1303 1302 1310 1301 1307 Average Standard Deviation Diameter (mic) 18.8 20.6 20 1 20.1 19.0 20.8 21.0 22.3 21.6 21.9 22.0 20.8 12 1.2 Yield (%) 89.1 91.5 80 0 80.0 54.8 75.0 70.4 64.7 53.2 55.4 52.0 68.6 14 9 14.9 Index 3.0 1.7 13 1.3 0.6 0.5 0.0 -1.5 -1.7 -1.8 -2.1 3.0 = (20.8-18.8)/1.2 + (89.1-68.6)/14.9 Productivity What next? • Further discuss and adjust j breeding g objective j – Traits p – Emphasis • Make breeding system self-sustainable by – Minimizing fiber analyses – Minimizing recording • Maximize genetic progress of f whole h l population l – Dissemination Characteristics of Iranian Cashmere Origin Color Down weight (g) Down diameter (mic) Down length (mm) Price (U /k (US/kg dehaired) (5) 15.6 32-38 148 Chinese (1) 100% White 550-650 Mongolian (1) 60% White 600 16.0-16.8 40-45 128 Iranian (2) White 287 19 7 19.7 54 110 Pamiri (3) Various 16.1 50 (1) UNIDO (2011) and Waldron (2011) (2) Our results (3) McGegor (2011) – Average of several village flocks (4) Schneider S h id G Group price i iindex d d dehaired h i d (30 J June 2011) Overall breeding g objective j considering g nomad income is based on sale of cashmere and meat • Product value ($/kg): g – Reduce cashmere fiber diameter – Maintain fiber length and white color • Productivity (kg/animal): – Increase cashmere weight, reproduction, bodyweight • Adaptation to the environment (GxE): – Survival, health, longevity, easy care, etc. Estimation of cashmere weight • Take T k shorn sh n fleece fl weight i ht • Take midside sample and: 1. Separate manually down from guard hairs, calculate yield and multiply by fleece weight, or 2 Use 2. Us OFDA and nd consider c nsid r fib fibers rs >30 mic ass guard u rd hair, use Wildman-Bray formula to calculate yield and multiply by fleece weight Cashmere yield calculation using Wildman––Bray method Wildman Guard hairs Freq quency Down fibers 10 20 Cashmere yield = 0 40 30 Fiber Diameter (mic) 50 60 nD*(mD2+sD2)*dD nD*(mD2+sD2)*dD + nG*(mG2+sG2)*dG Where n: number of fibers, m: FD mean, s: standard deviation, d: density In any case fleece weight is a good estimator of cashmere weight Correlation = 0.78 Source: our data … and weak relation between fleece weight and fiber diameter Correlation = 0.21 Fine and heavy fleeces Source: our data It seems that in Raeini goats follicle density d it (and/or ( d/ skin ki size) i ) iis responsible ibl for down weight instead of length or diameter as elsewhere Our results: FW DW x Length FW DW x Diam -0.04 -0.02 0.21 0.19 Diam x Length -0.03 Proposed simplified selection scheme Example for flock of 140 does, 7 bucks and 80% weaning rate N l Nucleus Males Females Females Males Parents 2 40 100 5 Progeny 16 16 40 40 At weaning Keep/tag 12 At shearing Take fleece w. Keep top 6 p Take sample At mating • • • • B Base Select top for N Next 2 for B Castrate all Select/paint top 10 for N Next 25 for B Separate mating of nucleus Identification of nucleus male progeny 12 (6) ear tags and fleece weights 6 fiber diameter determinations > pen or separate grazing > not difficult > use vet ear tag? Need scale > ASRI lab? What can we expect? • A largely self-sustained improved buck supply system for nomad flocks • Higher fleece weights and lower cashmere fiber diameter in nucleus and base flocks • Nomad farmers sensitive to further genetic i improvement t proposals l and d other th project j t interventions Breeding issues to address • Test if p proposed p design g is optimum p • Test if nucleus is enough better than base – Check selection differential (nucleus/total females) -> samples already collected. • Check value of including other traits – Bodyweights, birth type • Analyze use of external bucks – Exchange g bucks between flocks – Bucks from breeding station General issues to address which influence breeding decisions • See if a recording scheme can be managed and linked to breeding station recording. • See if flock structure can be adjusted to produce higher p g quality q y cashmere. • See if cashmere quality is paid for. • Develop a grading system accordingly. accordingly • Study optimum fiber collecting system -> study on the th way. • Study effect of local value adding on breeding objectives (emphasis on higher fiber length?) Final reflection The formation of these nucleus schemes is a useful f l ""rehearsal“ h l“ f for genetic ti improvement i t programs, and an opportunity to train operators, t consolidate lid t b breed d or strain t i genotypes while achieving genetic progress.