Zim to earn US$140m from cattle semen exports

21 Jun, 2019 - 00:06 0 Views
Zim to earn US$140m from cattle semen exports Artificial insemination programme will help grow the national cattle herd and revive the lucrative beef industry

eBusiness Weekly

Martin Kadzere
The launch of a cattle production facility at Chinhoyi University of Technology (CUT) is likely to see Zimbabwe earning more than US$140 million annually from cattle semen exports.

Besides foreign currency earnings, there is huge economic spin-offs potential as farmers, small abattoirs and even the Cold Storage Company are likely to benefit from the new farming technology.

Built by the technology university, the state-of-the-art cattle production facility has an integrated system that produces and store at least seven million semen straws per year.

In an interview this week, Higher and Tertiary Education, Science and Technology Development Minister Professor Amon Murwira, said the country currently requires 1,5 million straws for artificial insemination, leaving the remainder for the export markets.

CUT is already working on modalities to export semen as the current production is exceeding local market demand.

What is artificial insemination?
Artificial insemination involves the collection of sperm cells from a bull and manually deposit them into the reproductive tract of a cow. The initiative came following realisation that the country had a shortage of bulls, at a time the Government is working on restocking following a sharp decline of the national herd since 2 000. Zimbabwe has an estimated national herd of five million, of which 45 percent are males.

Previously, Zimbabwe was spending huge sums of money in importing the semen.

“We successfully launched the facility on March 22 and it is being run by CUT innovation hub,” said Prof Murirwa.

“The technology has capacity of producing and storing seven million semen straws per year and this provides a very lucrative export opportunity for the institution and the country,” said Prof Murirwa.

Move to build an industrial hub
In a separate interview, one of the project coordinators Dr Calvin Gomo said the university was now looking at building an industrial hub that will see the establishment of cattle related industries.

On Monday, the Government released $3 million to kick start the projects.

“We are looking at expanding the project so that it involves components associated with the project such as animal production and production of vaccines,” he said. The project has potential to generate thousands of jobs once fully implemented.

Dr Gomo said the university was working with the Ministry of Lands, Agriculture, Water, Climate and Rural Resettlement to roll out artificial insemination in the country.

“We are working with the Ministry of Agriculture and other various stakeholders to create awareness to our local farmers on this innovative initiative,” said Dr Gomo. After production, the cattle semen can be stored for 40 years in nitrogen tanks.

Benefits of artificial insemination
Artificial insemination comes along with huge benefits such as increased efficiency of bull usage. During natural breeding, a male will deposit much more semen than is theoretically needed to produce a pregnancy. In addition, natural breeding is physically stressful. Both of these factors limit the number of natural matings a male can make.

Collected semen can be diluted and extended to create hundreds of doses from a single ejaculate. In addition, semen can be easily transported, allowing multiple females in different geographical locations to be inseminated simultaneously, and semen can be stored for long periods of time, meaning that males can produce offspring long after their natural reproductive lives end. Because artificial insemination allows males to produce more offspring, fewer males are needed. Therefore, one can choose only the few best males for use as parents, increasing the selection intensity.

Furthermore, because males can have more offspring, their offspring can be used in a progeny test program to more accurately evaluate the genetic value of the male.

Finally, individual farmers can use artificial insemination to increase the genetic pool with, which his or her animals can be mated, potentially decreasing effects of inbreeding.

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