Improving hybrid vigour, meaning offspring have more desirable traits than parents, is worth $160/cow/year, according to Genomic Validation studies done on Alberta’s commercial cows. This means that improving hybrid vigour for Canada’s 3.56M beef cattle would equate to over $200M for the beef sector, benefiting not just producers but the entire supply chain.
“Data-driven genetic decisions and the adoption of genetic technologies will benefit the whole Canadian beef production value-chain. Using accurate genetic data is essential to ensuring Alberta beef continues to be known worldwide as the best. This genomic technology will drive sustainable growth across the cattle industry."
Dr. David Chalack DVM, Chair, RDAR Board of Directors
This funding will support further development of genomic tools, collaboration with producers and service providers to implement genomics in their herds and help drive adoption across the sector.
“The adoption of genomic tools by the Canadian beef industry is critical to its competitiveness, profitability and sustainability. This 4-year project delivered by RDAR, under Sustainable CAP, provides beef producers with an incentive to start or continue their journey of using genomics and data driven genetic decisions to improve their profit and environmental sustainability in a changing climate. Speaking for myself and the team at Livestock Gentec, the University of Alberta, and Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, we are excited to work with producers and their service providers to deploy and evaluate these genomic tools in the many production environments of western Canada.”
Dr. John Basarab, CEO of Livestock Genetec and RDAR Professor, University of Alberta
“With the exponential advances in genomics, animal health, and data management, huge opportunities exist to improve the competitiveness, profitability, and environmental impact of organizations able to generate, manipulate, and integrate data to optimize their operations. Taken together, these now allow companies to tie genetic, environmental, and animal management decisions directly to animal health, performance, and the overall operational profitability and environmental outcomes within their organizations.”
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