Te Awamutu Courier

Portal protects flocks

Farmers urged to play their part in keeping exotic diseases at bay by embracing data system

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Sheep farmers can support a disease outbreak response by signing up to MyOSPRI. Sheep farmers are being encouraged to play their part in protecting the industry from exotic diseases by signing up to the new online portal MyOSPRI.

Over 1000 sheep farmers have already ditched paper-based Animal Status Declaratio­ns (ASDs) and are now using MyOSPRI to send both farm-to-farm and farm-to-meat processor electronic Animal Status Declaratio­ns (eASDs).

The eASDs provide accurate, reliable and readily accessible data about movements of sheep mobs and where farms and other places animals have been or are located.

In any future response, rapid access to accurate informatio­n about animal movements will be vital for minimising the size of any potential future outbreak.

Kevin Forward, head of traceabili­ty at OSPRI, says that the MyOSPRI system will vastly improve the sector’s ability to launch an effective response in the event of a disease outbreak.

“In the unlikely event of an outbreak such as foot and mouth disease (FMD), it’s extremely important to keep tracking and tracing of animals accurately recorded and up to date.

“This is particular­ly critical for movements of mobs of sheep, which unlike cattle and deer are not covered by the

National Animal Identifica­tion Tracing programme.

“The best way to do that is through MyOSPRI.

“Not only will sheep farmers benefit from using MyOSPRI, but we’ll have a better picture of all locations where cattle, deer and sheep move between for a response team to use in the event of a disease outbreak.

“Movements recorded using paperbased ASDs are not kept in a centralise­d database and would slow our ability to trace a rapidly moving disease such as FMD.” Paper ASDs will still need to be used for saleyards, said Kevin.

Andrew Morrison, chairman of Beef + Lamb New Zealand and a Southland sheep and beef farmer, said that while the risk of foot and mouth disease arriving in New Zealand is still considered to be very low, everyone needs to play their part in helping prevent FMD entering the country and spreading.

“I encourage sheep farmers to sign up to MyOSPRI and use electronic ASDs so the industry can move quickly in the unlikely event of a disease outbreak.

“I have personally found using the electronic system is much easier and faster. It also gives me confidence that I am doing everything I can to protect my farm, my neighbour and the industry.”

MyOSPRI is OSPRI’s new online customer portal that will eventually enable farmers to access OSPRI’s integrated animal disease and traceabili­ty system.

It has replaced the eASD system and in the future will bring together NAIT and disease management informatio­n into one system, so farmers can view disease informatio­n and manage livestock movements easily online, and in one place.

 ?? ?? OSPRI head of traceabili­ty Kevin Forward.
OSPRI head of traceabili­ty Kevin Forward.

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