From Deseret News archives:

Scare could hone cattle tracking

Published: Tuesday, Dec. 30, 2003 6:08 p.m. MST
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
If there's a bright side to the U.S. mad cow scare, it's that it could speed the nation's move to a centralized system that electronically tracks animals as they move from fields to feed lots to food stores.

Efforts to create a centralized database, which exists in some countries, have been slowed so far by disputes over who would maintain the database and who would bear its cost.

Such a database could let agricultural officials determine within hours where a sick animal came from and where it went — a crucial step in a disease outbreak or a terrorist assault on the food supply.

Agriculture Secretary Ann Veneman said Tuesday that the government would speed development of the system but offered no details.

For now, inspectors often must rely on paper records or a hodgepodge of data maintained by meat producers and breeders. After the recent mad cow discovery in Washington state, officials needed several days to determine where its meat had been sold and encountered discrepancies in U.S. and Canadian records.

"It's very difficult and probably not possible for them to go to a particular animal and say that animal came from that particular farm," said Leon Thacker, a veterinary pathologist at Purdue University.

Technology stands ready to automate the process.

Story continues below
Radio-frequency identification (RFID) tags on cattle ears can maintain reams of data about an animal's existence, including its breeding, age, weight and medical history. The tags can be automatically read, sending their data directly to a computer database, by sensors placed at feed lots, slaughterhouses and other points along the chain of livestock ownership.

One company, Optibrand Ltd., further tightens the process with retinal scans of cattle to confirm their identity. Optibrand's scans are performed with readers that have global-positioning chips to record the animal's location.

Optibrand, based in Fort Collins, Colo., announced a five-year deal Tuesday to supply its technology to Swift & Co., a leading meat producer. Swift spokesman Jim Herlihy said the company will use the retinal scans in its feedlots and encourage its suppliers to embrace them as well, to make the entire life of livestock more easily traced.

Another approach is offered by Digital Angel Corp., which makes implantable chips that are used to identify lost dogs and cats and also in some cattle herds. Digital Angel, based in South St. Paul, Minn., touts the fact that the chips are unlikely to be lost or damaged.

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

Image
Associated Press

Colorado ranchers capture Optibrand image, which uniquely identifies an animal.

previousnext

Latest comments

You know what interests me, state law prohibits beer being sold at Rice...

Swiss ban mosque minarets

Radical Muslims will incessantly complain about this. Let them. Common...

Hall mouths off about hate of Utah

Max speaks the truth about Utah fan behavior Utah fans act offended...

The wicked taketh the truth to be hard. Way to go Max, your the man.

Hall mouths off about hate of Utah

"Sent emails to BYU AD Tom Holmoe, Bronco Mendenhall and ESPN news desk...

Over 500 comments on this story about Max's comments. Too bad it is...

Marriage definitions vary widely

RE: Crux | 1:23 p.m. Nov. 29, 2009 So people shouldn't be able to get...

The Utes can do everything on this message board except deny that their...

BYU, Utah game highlights

The Max Hall quote just shows his great articulation and just what a classy...

BYU is champion of the state

From a fan who wants to see this Rivalry get it's recognition as the best...

Advertisements