Animal Enterprises importation 1986
Live animals imported
Finn, Texel, East Friesian, Gotland Pelt, White Headed Marsh
Quarantine facilities
Business details
Animal Enterprises (AE) importation
Early
in 1986 the livestock exporting company Animal Enterprises (AE) took what was
described by Dr Jock Allison as ‘a very bold step’ of importing a plane load of
live sheep of three main breeds - Finnish Landrace,
Texel and East Friesian from about 70% of the same genetic sources in Denmark as
MAF did for their second importation using frozen embryos and semen.
Information obtained from paper presented
by Dr Jock Allison to NZ Institute of Primary Industry Management, December
2006
Dr Neil Clarke says they were both basically the same breed.
Photo: German White Headed Marsh. Photo: Internet
The total importation was made up of 301 ewes and 43 rams which on arrival went into a quarantine facility in the old stock yards of the closed down Southdown Freezing works in south Auckland.
Why were live sheep allowed in?
After
all the effort that went into MAFTech’s second importation in 1984 to bring in
frozen embryos and semen, the obvious question is why then did the Chief Veterinary
Officer and the Maximum Security Quarantine Advisory
Committee (MSQAC) approve the importation of live sheep again.
Had the rules changed in just two years while all the work of multiplying the MAF imported sheep was in full swing?
Had the rules changed in just two years while all the work of multiplying the MAF imported sheep was in full swing?
Dr Peter O'Hara. Photo: Words and Pictures |
Given the quarantine protocol and facilities that were developed for an AE importation, MAF and MSQAC let AE bring the donors to New Zealand as live animals, provided they were all slaughtered at the end of the quarantine period.
Breeds and quarantine venue
Gotland Pelt. Photo: Internet |
The White Headed Marsh was very similar to the old Romney so could have had some value – if you stretched your imagination far enough!
At Southdown the ewes lived on dry concentrate rations and bedded on sawdust without sunshine or pasture. They lambed in February and March 1986, having been mated in the Northern hemisphere autumn in October. The company decided that it would not be possible to re-mate the ewes naturally in the 1986 year, but Jock Allison designed a very successful hormone regime for them, from which more than two thirds of the ewes lambed at 160% lambing.
But MAF
bureaucratic protocols were not sheep friendly, and stated that the imported
ewes had to end their days at Southdown in that alien environment, where only embryos
could be collected for ET work at ‘another location’. An island location was suggested, where the derived progeny
would stay till the end of the 5 years minimal quarantine in February1991.
Business changes
Jock’s
first main challenge was to persuade MAF to be more practical and cooperative, and
agree to a secondary quarantine area that was suitable for sheep. Jock says there were complaints from
industry and even the NZ Veterinary Association, none of which were based on
logic, and fortunately MAF stuck to their guns.
Dr Jock Allison. Photo: Otago Daily Times
Dr Jock Allison. Photo: Otago Daily Times
Jock Allison said that in 1987 a newly listed company Cashmere Pacific agreed to purchase AE for an attractive price, but with the share market crash of that year, the company literally disappeared. Fortunately for the company, the NZ Dairy Board (NZDB) took over AE, and the sheep importation project was renamed LambXL. They appointed a General Manager (Mike Harman) and a Board of Directors.
With NZDB
in control, their AI station at Awahuri near Palmerston North was the obvious
site for a primary quarantine and ET facility with a secondary one on a farm
near Cheltenham.
Jock reported some wonderful tales of MAF bureaucratic nitpicking with their vets from Palmerston North who had a supervisory role of the station.
Jock reported some wonderful tales of MAF bureaucratic nitpicking with their vets from Palmerston North who had a supervisory role of the station.
Dr Robin Tervit said he helped with the ET work at Awahuri for LambXL after his employment by a company called Genestock collapsed. Genestock was in the cattle embryo transfer business.
Photos: Dr Deric Charlton
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