1 / 4

Farm Animal & Vet Public Health Faculty of Veterinary Science University of Sydney

Farm Animal & Vet Public Health Faculty of Veterinary Science University of Sydney. Jenny-Ann Toribio BVSc MANZCVSc MEd PhD Associate Professor in Epidemiology. ILRI ACIAR International Symposium 23-25 April 2012. Experience – SE Asia. 18 years working in smallholder pig sector

lamis
Télécharger la présentation

Farm Animal & Vet Public Health Faculty of Veterinary Science University of Sydney

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Farm Animal & Vet Public HealthFaculty of Veterinary ScienceUniversity of Sydney Jenny-Ann Toribio BVScMANZCVScMEd PhD Associate Professor in Epidemiology ILRI ACIAR International Symposium 23-25 April 2012

  2. Experience – SE Asia • 18 years working in smallholder pig sector • In Indonesia and Philippines - ACIAR research • Focus on herds ≤5 sows kept for home consumption, cultural practices and supplementary income AS/1994/121 Defining problems & opportunities for smallholder pig production in the Philippines ASEM/1997/041 Enhancing contribution of livestock in smallholder mixed farming systems in Philippines AH/2006/156 Livestock movement and managing disease in Eastern Indonesia and Eastern Australia • Contributions • Productivity & factors related to higher productivity of smallholder herds in the Philippines • Tool kit – Improving pig performance & profit • Network of formal & informal pig trade in eastern Indonesia

  3. Experience - Australia In Australia – Aust Biosecurity CRC & ACIAR research Focus on herds ≤100 sows sales via saleyards, to other farms and to consumers; not on consignment to abattoir. Pigs kept for home consumption, cultural practices and secondary income. Constitute a substantial % of pig producers but small % of pigs produced. ABCRC 3.016RE Peri-urban and remote regional surveillance for biosecurity for the pig industry in Eastern Australia ABCRC 3.086R Assessment of the risks to animal biosecurity associated with small landholders • Contributions • Trade & biosecurity practices of smallholder herds • Assessment of biosecurity risk for TAD of this sector compared to commercial sector

  4. Lessons – Managing health risk • 1. Improve management within local context • Confine pigs along with management of reproduction (oestrus detection, boar use) and nutrition (rations using locally available feedstuffs) • Enhance access to reproduction, nutrition and health information • 2. Support safe trade instead of prohibition • People will break the rules for a variety of reasons & authorities will be kept ‘in the dark’ until there is a disease outbreak • Better to support safe trade & share the responsibility for health control • 3. Enable smallholder contribution and collaboration • Famer groups – collective negotiation on inputs and outputs with supply companies and traders • Village biosecurity – collective action to safeguard community from TAD • Farm quality assurance – relevant to smallholder herds e.g. APIQ™ Australian Pork Industry Quality Assurance Program - Specific for herds ≤50 sows or 1000 pigs sold per year

More Related