By Beth Bacheldor
Nov. 12, 2007—At Costa View Farms in Madera, Calif., more than 6,000 dairy cows have been tagged with passive
RFID transponders encoded with unique ID numbers. The identification system has saved the farm's workers countless hours previously spent searching for and treating cows, while also improving its animal records and even boosting milk production.
The farm is utilizing an animal identification system (AES) from
Valley Agriculture Software that incorporates three handheld RFID interrogators, headsets worn by workers to hear audible beeps when specific animals are located, associated software, desktop computers and
Allflex USA half-
duplex RFID transponders embedded in small plastic discs. The transponders operate at 134.2 kHz, comply with the
ISO 11784 tag data standard and ISO 11785 tag air-interface standard, and can be
read from up to a distance of 100 cm (39.4 in.). The tags are designed for insertion in the middle of a cow's ear, between the two cartilage ribs close to the head.
Costa View Farms first started employing RFID about four years ago, when the
U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) began investigating the technology to monitor U.S. poultry and livestock populations so it could more quickly and effectively trace animal disease to the source in the event of a breakout. At the time, many expected the USDA to mandate the use of an animal identification system. That has not yet happened, but Costa View and many other farmers decided to start implementing RFID technology anyway, so they could more easily track individual animals.
"We decided if legislation was coming, we should take advantage of the [RFID] program and use it as a management tool," says Larry Pietrowski, co-owner of Costa View Farms. "And, if it ever becomes mandatory, we will have already fulfilled the requirements."
Using RFID to identify and track livestock is one of the fastest growing, and largest, RFID sectors to date, according to British research and analysis firm
IDTechEx. In fact, the firm expects worldwide sales of RFID tags to rise from $233 million in 2007 to $2.93 billion in 2017, with livestock and food applications accounting for 90 percent of that total. IDTechEx further predicts that sales of RFID systems (including tags) used for farming, food and animals will rise from $531 million in 2007 worldwide to $6.53 billion in 2017 (see
Food and Livestock Tagging Expected to See Bumper Gains).
Costa View Farms has tagged about 95 percent of its 6,800 cattle in order to more easily identify cows requiring a regiment of shots, and then document which cows have been treated. As part of a synchronized breeding program, the farm gives shots to approximately 250 cows every Tuesday and Wednesday, to force ovulation; the cows are then bred three days later. Using the handheld interrogators, workers can walk among cows locked in their stanchions (the metal stalls in dairy barns that hold the animals in place while they are milked) and quickly identify which ones are due for their shots.
READERS' COMMENTS
why chipping horses is not a good idea
why chipping horses is not a good idea http://nonais.org/index.php/2007/11/13/effects-of-chipping-on-horses-in-nl/
Posted By: R. 11/15/2007 at 2:25:39 PM
RFID and Milk
First you have to know the animal is sick, and per the new saying first responder would be the owner or manager of herd. Not an ear tag. Update records makes it sound as if the ear tag has a key board attached and then how Does an ear tag make a cow milk better then it did the old way. The milk goes into a jug and its recorded.. Am I missing something...
Posted By: R. 11/15/2007 at 9:45:59 PM
RFID Saves Time Treating Cows
From your article: "The identification system has saved the farm's workers countless hours previously spent searching for and treating cows" Does the RFID tag check every cow every day to determine if it needs to be treated? Of course not! You need a human to check each cow! RFID tags will not, not, NOT prevent disease outbreaks.
Posted By: K. Nowak 11/16/2007 at 4:08:05 AM